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Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis

BACKGROUND: Despite growing efforts to improve access to vaccination, millions of children, especially in developing countries, have not received a single dose of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) vaccine. Consequently, they are often called zero-dose children (ZDC). With limited health resou...

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Autores principales: Saidu, Yauba, Agbor, Valirie N, Di Mattei, Pietro, Nchinjoh, Sangwe C, Edwidge, Nnang N, Njoh, Andreas A, Muteh, Nkwain J, Prescott, Marta, Wiwa, Owens, Diack, Demba, Flegere, Junie, Montomoli, Emanuele, Costa Clemens, Sue A, Clemens, Ralf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society of Global Health 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10653342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37971948
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.13.04136
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author Saidu, Yauba
Agbor, Valirie N
Di Mattei, Pietro
Nchinjoh, Sangwe C
Edwidge, Nnang N
Njoh, Andreas A
Muteh, Nkwain J
Prescott, Marta
Wiwa, Owens
Diack, Demba
Flegere, Junie
Montomoli, Emanuele
Costa Clemens, Sue A
Clemens, Ralf
author_facet Saidu, Yauba
Agbor, Valirie N
Di Mattei, Pietro
Nchinjoh, Sangwe C
Edwidge, Nnang N
Njoh, Andreas A
Muteh, Nkwain J
Prescott, Marta
Wiwa, Owens
Diack, Demba
Flegere, Junie
Montomoli, Emanuele
Costa Clemens, Sue A
Clemens, Ralf
author_sort Saidu, Yauba
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite growing efforts to improve access to vaccination, millions of children, especially in developing countries, have not received a single dose of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) vaccine. Consequently, they are often called zero-dose children (ZDC). With limited health resources, prioritising communities for rapid and mass zero-dose catch-up vaccination in missed communities to avert epidemic outbreaks is complicated by unreliable denominators used to compute vaccination coverages. Incorporating other indicators of access and utilisation of vaccination services can help with identifying and ranking missed communities based on the likelihood of finding ZDC. We described the process of generating a scoring method to rank health areas in Cameroon based on their likelihood of containing ZDC. METHODS: We used geospatial analysis to compute and aggregate health area characteristics, including hard-to-reach (HTR) areas (defined as areas of settlement above a one- (for urban areas) or 15-kilometre radius (for rural areas) beyond a vaccinating health facility), amount of area covered by slums and new area settlement, and percentage of children unvaccinated for DTP-1. We attributed a weight based on the ability to limit accessibility or utilisation of vaccination services to each characteristic and computed the score as a weighted average of health area characteristics. The health area score ranged from 0 to 1, with higher scores representing a higher likelihood of containing ZDC. We stratified the analysis by rural and urban health areas. RESULTS: We observed substantial district and regional variations in health area scores, with hotspots health areas (administrative level 4) observed in the Far North (0.83), North (0.81), Adamawa (0.80), East (0.75), and South West (0.67) regions. The Adamawa region had the highest percentage of health areas with the highest score (78%), followed by the East (50%), West (48%), and North (46%) regions. For most regions (Far North, South, South West, Littoral, West, and North West), DTP-1 contributed the most to the score. However, HTR settlement areas within a health area contributed substantially to the overall score in the East, North, and Adamawa regions. CONCLUSIONS: We found substantial variations in health area scores with hotspots in the Far North, North, Adamawa, East, and South West regions. Although DTP-1 could be used as an indicator to identify health areas with ZDC for most communities, HTR settlement area was a valuable indicator in ranking priority health areas in the East, North, and Adamawa regions, further emphasising the need to consider other indicators before prioritisation.
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spelling pubmed-106533422023-11-17 Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis Saidu, Yauba Agbor, Valirie N Di Mattei, Pietro Nchinjoh, Sangwe C Edwidge, Nnang N Njoh, Andreas A Muteh, Nkwain J Prescott, Marta Wiwa, Owens Diack, Demba Flegere, Junie Montomoli, Emanuele Costa Clemens, Sue A Clemens, Ralf J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: Despite growing efforts to improve access to vaccination, millions of children, especially in developing countries, have not received a single dose of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) vaccine. Consequently, they are often called zero-dose children (ZDC). With limited health resources, prioritising communities for rapid and mass zero-dose catch-up vaccination in missed communities to avert epidemic outbreaks is complicated by unreliable denominators used to compute vaccination coverages. Incorporating other indicators of access and utilisation of vaccination services can help with identifying and ranking missed communities based on the likelihood of finding ZDC. We described the process of generating a scoring method to rank health areas in Cameroon based on their likelihood of containing ZDC. METHODS: We used geospatial analysis to compute and aggregate health area characteristics, including hard-to-reach (HTR) areas (defined as areas of settlement above a one- (for urban areas) or 15-kilometre radius (for rural areas) beyond a vaccinating health facility), amount of area covered by slums and new area settlement, and percentage of children unvaccinated for DTP-1. We attributed a weight based on the ability to limit accessibility or utilisation of vaccination services to each characteristic and computed the score as a weighted average of health area characteristics. The health area score ranged from 0 to 1, with higher scores representing a higher likelihood of containing ZDC. We stratified the analysis by rural and urban health areas. RESULTS: We observed substantial district and regional variations in health area scores, with hotspots health areas (administrative level 4) observed in the Far North (0.83), North (0.81), Adamawa (0.80), East (0.75), and South West (0.67) regions. The Adamawa region had the highest percentage of health areas with the highest score (78%), followed by the East (50%), West (48%), and North (46%) regions. For most regions (Far North, South, South West, Littoral, West, and North West), DTP-1 contributed the most to the score. However, HTR settlement areas within a health area contributed substantially to the overall score in the East, North, and Adamawa regions. CONCLUSIONS: We found substantial variations in health area scores with hotspots in the Far North, North, Adamawa, East, and South West regions. Although DTP-1 could be used as an indicator to identify health areas with ZDC for most communities, HTR settlement area was a valuable indicator in ranking priority health areas in the East, North, and Adamawa regions, further emphasising the need to consider other indicators before prioritisation. International Society of Global Health 2023-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10653342/ /pubmed/37971948 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.13.04136 Text en Copyright © 2023 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Saidu, Yauba
Agbor, Valirie N
Di Mattei, Pietro
Nchinjoh, Sangwe C
Edwidge, Nnang N
Njoh, Andreas A
Muteh, Nkwain J
Prescott, Marta
Wiwa, Owens
Diack, Demba
Flegere, Junie
Montomoli, Emanuele
Costa Clemens, Sue A
Clemens, Ralf
Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title_full Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title_fullStr Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title_full_unstemmed Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title_short Development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in Cameroon: A geospatial analysis
title_sort development of a composite scoring system to rank communities at high risk of zero-dose children in cameroon: a geospatial analysis
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10653342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37971948
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.13.04136
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