Inequality in childhood immunization coverage: a scoping review of data sources, analyses, and reporting methods
Inequality in childhood immunization coverage: a scoping review of data sources, analyses, and reporting methods
Immunization through vaccines among children has contributed to improved childhood survival and health outcomes globally. However, vaccine coverage among children is unevenly distributed across settings and populations. The measurement of inequalities is essential for understanding gaps in vaccine coverage affecting certain sub-populations and monitoring progress towards achieving equity. Our study aimed to characterize the methods of reporting inequalities in childhood vaccine coverage, inclusive of the settings, data source types, analytical methods, and reporting modalities used to quantify and communicate inequality. We conducted a scoping review of publications in academic journals which included analyses of inequalities in vaccination among children. Literature searches were conducted in PubMed and Web of Science and included relevant articles published between 8 December 2013 and 7 December 2023. Overall, 242 publications were identified, including 204 assessing inequalities in a single country and 38 assessing inequalities across more than one country. We observed that analyses on inequalities in childhood vaccine coverage rely heavily on Demographic Health Survey (DHS) or Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) data (39.3%), and papers leveraging these data had increased in the last decade. Additionally, about half of the single-country studies were conducted in low- and middle-income countries. We found that few studies analyzed and reported inequalities using summary measures of health inequality and largely used the odds ratio resulting from logistic regression models for analyses. The most analyzed dimensions of inequality were economic status and maternal education, and the most common vaccine outcome indicator was full vaccination with the recommended vaccine schedule. However, the definition and construction of both dimensions of inequality and vaccine coverage measures varied across studies, and a variety of approaches were used to study inequalities in vaccine coverage across contexts. Overall, harmonizing methods for selecting and categorizing dimensions of inequalities as well as methods for analyzing and reporting inequalities can improve our ability to assess the magnitude and patterns of inequality in vaccine coverage and compare those inequalities across settings and time.
health inequalities, immunization, infant and child health, scoping review, vaccination
Lyons, Carrie
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Nambiar, Devaki
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Johns, Nicole E.
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Allorant, Adrien
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Bergen, Nicole
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Hosseinpoor, Ahmad Reza
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29 July 2024
Lyons, Carrie
37d5a475-ff8c-4912-8f57-3f3bdd06df8c
Nambiar, Devaki
c7a8bdde-a67a-498a-8866-e35f3b843330
Johns, Nicole E.
eaafa898-5cb5-4c3d-978f-748a871e9ddf
Allorant, Adrien
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Bergen, Nicole
83f9edee-eaa2-4b70-a8a9-5bd40ec88102
Hosseinpoor, Ahmad Reza
cd4bb274-2b8b-4900-ba14-4b0df61958f1
Lyons, Carrie, Nambiar, Devaki, Johns, Nicole E., Allorant, Adrien, Bergen, Nicole and Hosseinpoor, Ahmad Reza
(2024)
Inequality in childhood immunization coverage: a scoping review of data sources, analyses, and reporting methods.
Vaccines, 12 (8), [850].
(doi:10.3390/vaccines12080850).
Abstract
Immunization through vaccines among children has contributed to improved childhood survival and health outcomes globally. However, vaccine coverage among children is unevenly distributed across settings and populations. The measurement of inequalities is essential for understanding gaps in vaccine coverage affecting certain sub-populations and monitoring progress towards achieving equity. Our study aimed to characterize the methods of reporting inequalities in childhood vaccine coverage, inclusive of the settings, data source types, analytical methods, and reporting modalities used to quantify and communicate inequality. We conducted a scoping review of publications in academic journals which included analyses of inequalities in vaccination among children. Literature searches were conducted in PubMed and Web of Science and included relevant articles published between 8 December 2013 and 7 December 2023. Overall, 242 publications were identified, including 204 assessing inequalities in a single country and 38 assessing inequalities across more than one country. We observed that analyses on inequalities in childhood vaccine coverage rely heavily on Demographic Health Survey (DHS) or Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) data (39.3%), and papers leveraging these data had increased in the last decade. Additionally, about half of the single-country studies were conducted in low- and middle-income countries. We found that few studies analyzed and reported inequalities using summary measures of health inequality and largely used the odds ratio resulting from logistic regression models for analyses. The most analyzed dimensions of inequality were economic status and maternal education, and the most common vaccine outcome indicator was full vaccination with the recommended vaccine schedule. However, the definition and construction of both dimensions of inequality and vaccine coverage measures varied across studies, and a variety of approaches were used to study inequalities in vaccine coverage across contexts. Overall, harmonizing methods for selecting and categorizing dimensions of inequalities as well as methods for analyzing and reporting inequalities can improve our ability to assess the magnitude and patterns of inequality in vaccine coverage and compare those inequalities across settings and time.
Text
vaccines-12-00850-v2
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 20 July 2024
Published date: 29 July 2024
Keywords:
health inequalities, immunization, infant and child health, scoping review, vaccination
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Local EPrints ID: 497248
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497248
ISSN: 2076-393X
PURE UUID: 15de61fb-68cf-473f-9bb6-3198bd543172
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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2025 17:48
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:45
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Contributors
Author:
Carrie Lyons
Author:
Devaki Nambiar
Author:
Nicole E. Johns
Author:
Adrien Allorant
Author:
Nicole Bergen
Author:
Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor
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