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Vaccination in pregnancy against pertussis and seasonal influenza: Key learnings and components from high-performing vaccine programmes in three countries: the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain

Vaccination in pregnancy against pertussis and seasonal influenza: Key learnings and components from high-performing vaccine programmes in three countries: the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain
Vaccination in pregnancy against pertussis and seasonal influenza: Key learnings and components from high-performing vaccine programmes in three countries: the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain
Background: Pertussis and seasonal influenza are responsible for significant maternal, neonatal, and infant morbidity and mortality, but vaccine coverage rates (VCR) for both pertussis (administered as a tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis [Tdap] vaccination) and seasonal influenza in pregnancy remain generally low. Only a small number of countries, including Spain, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US), have high Tdap and seasonal influenza VCRs in pregnancy. The purpose of this study was to identify the key factors that contributed to the high VCRs observed in these countries.
Methods: The experience from both Tdap and seasonal influenza vaccination programmes during pregnancy were documented in Spain, the UK, and the US using a three-step approach. A literature review yielded 157 publications, and a further 117 documents were selected through desk research. A published five-pillar VCR framework for influenza was amended to evaluate the specific contributing factors leading to high Tdap and seasonal influenza VCRs among pregnant women.
Results: The analysis identified components that contributed to higher VCR in pregnant women across three different healthcare systems in Spain, UK, and US. The combination of several key interventions in each country led to a rapid increase in VCR that reached near-optimal levels (i.e. 75% for seasonal influenza) within a few years. As well as inclusion in national immunisation programme and vaccine reimbursement, key components that were identified included the mobilisation of health authorities, prenatal care Healthcare Professionals (HCP) and scientific societies, the inclusion of vaccination in antenatal medical guidance, the provision of educational material to HCPs, and a strong disease awareness driven by recent pertussis outbreaks in each country.
Conclusions: Although there is no simple, universal solution to improving sub-optimal VCRs, the list of components identified in this study from three countries with high-performing Tdap and seasonal influenza vaccination programmes provides a basis for public health and medical stakeholders in other countries to define strategies to successfully implement national vaccination programmes for pregnant women.
Immunisation, Influenza, Maternal, Pertussis, Pregnancy, Prenatal, Tdap, Vaccine coverage rate
1471-2458
Baïssas, Théophile
d1bc743c-fe2d-43d2-8eb8-cef492038601
Boisnard, Florence
027ee947-f5a4-4fc3-989a-7c923eb027d2
Cuesta Esteve, Inmaculada
2d6771cc-a43c-44bb-a3e4-d8b2c179eaca
Garcia Sánchez, Marta
3cf0a782-f598-47b9-b41f-b5c9707f9b15
Jones, Christine E
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Rigoine de Fougerolles, Thierry
9f84874f-dc21-461c-b2d2-02e6117bf6ab
Tan, Litjen
4d2bc762-c660-462c-81cd-a96c6d179410
Vitoux, Olivier
7c7bf25a-7b00-4610-806e-773b0935157a
Klein, Christina
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Baïssas, Théophile
d1bc743c-fe2d-43d2-8eb8-cef492038601
Boisnard, Florence
027ee947-f5a4-4fc3-989a-7c923eb027d2
Cuesta Esteve, Inmaculada
2d6771cc-a43c-44bb-a3e4-d8b2c179eaca
Garcia Sánchez, Marta
3cf0a782-f598-47b9-b41f-b5c9707f9b15
Jones, Christine E
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Rigoine de Fougerolles, Thierry
9f84874f-dc21-461c-b2d2-02e6117bf6ab
Tan, Litjen
4d2bc762-c660-462c-81cd-a96c6d179410
Vitoux, Olivier
7c7bf25a-7b00-4610-806e-773b0935157a
Klein, Christina
1a8c8e7d-23ab-4352-9b27-3d0c0c51b3e8

Baïssas, Théophile, Boisnard, Florence, Cuesta Esteve, Inmaculada, Garcia Sánchez, Marta, Jones, Christine E, Rigoine de Fougerolles, Thierry, Tan, Litjen, Vitoux, Olivier and Klein, Christina (2021) Vaccination in pregnancy against pertussis and seasonal influenza: Key learnings and components from high-performing vaccine programmes in three countries: the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain. BMC Public Health, 21 (1), [2182]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-021-12198-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Pertussis and seasonal influenza are responsible for significant maternal, neonatal, and infant morbidity and mortality, but vaccine coverage rates (VCR) for both pertussis (administered as a tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis [Tdap] vaccination) and seasonal influenza in pregnancy remain generally low. Only a small number of countries, including Spain, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US), have high Tdap and seasonal influenza VCRs in pregnancy. The purpose of this study was to identify the key factors that contributed to the high VCRs observed in these countries.
Methods: The experience from both Tdap and seasonal influenza vaccination programmes during pregnancy were documented in Spain, the UK, and the US using a three-step approach. A literature review yielded 157 publications, and a further 117 documents were selected through desk research. A published five-pillar VCR framework for influenza was amended to evaluate the specific contributing factors leading to high Tdap and seasonal influenza VCRs among pregnant women.
Results: The analysis identified components that contributed to higher VCR in pregnant women across three different healthcare systems in Spain, UK, and US. The combination of several key interventions in each country led to a rapid increase in VCR that reached near-optimal levels (i.e. 75% for seasonal influenza) within a few years. As well as inclusion in national immunisation programme and vaccine reimbursement, key components that were identified included the mobilisation of health authorities, prenatal care Healthcare Professionals (HCP) and scientific societies, the inclusion of vaccination in antenatal medical guidance, the provision of educational material to HCPs, and a strong disease awareness driven by recent pertussis outbreaks in each country.
Conclusions: Although there is no simple, universal solution to improving sub-optimal VCRs, the list of components identified in this study from three countries with high-performing Tdap and seasonal influenza vaccination programmes provides a basis for public health and medical stakeholders in other countries to define strategies to successfully implement national vaccination programmes for pregnant women.

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[Article] Vaccination in pregnancy against pertussis and seasonal influenza
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 November 2021
Published date: 29 November 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: The manuscript received editorial support from a professional medical writer, Dr. Andrew Lane (Lane Medical Writing, France), funded by Sanofi Pasteur. Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s).
Keywords: Immunisation, Influenza, Maternal, Pertussis, Pregnancy, Prenatal, Tdap, Vaccine coverage rate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452754
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452754
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 30a268c8-1ebb-4944-b664-2db3ae4777c7
ORCID for Christine E Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1523-2368

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2021 18:20
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:45

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Contributors

Author: Théophile Baïssas
Author: Florence Boisnard
Author: Inmaculada Cuesta Esteve
Author: Marta Garcia Sánchez
Author: Thierry Rigoine de Fougerolles
Author: Litjen Tan
Author: Olivier Vitoux
Author: Christina Klein

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