Cargando…

Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal

Although the Government of Nepal has achieved high and sustained childhood vaccination coverage, reaching under-immunized and zero-dose children requires different approaches. Behavioral science offers promise in better understanding the drivers of vaccination and development of more effective progr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Castle, Nicole, Kunwar, Surakshya, Khanal, Leela, Oot, Lisa, Elkes, Katharine, Shrestha, Swechhya, Joshi, Anjali, Rai, Prasanna, Bhattarai, Sanju, Karmacharya, Biraj Man
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10675610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38006041
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11111709
_version_ 1785141105647419392
author Castle, Nicole
Kunwar, Surakshya
Khanal, Leela
Oot, Lisa
Elkes, Katharine
Shrestha, Swechhya
Joshi, Anjali
Rai, Prasanna
Bhattarai, Sanju
Karmacharya, Biraj Man
author_facet Castle, Nicole
Kunwar, Surakshya
Khanal, Leela
Oot, Lisa
Elkes, Katharine
Shrestha, Swechhya
Joshi, Anjali
Rai, Prasanna
Bhattarai, Sanju
Karmacharya, Biraj Man
author_sort Castle, Nicole
collection PubMed
description Although the Government of Nepal has achieved high and sustained childhood vaccination coverage, reaching under-immunized and zero-dose children requires different approaches. Behavioral science offers promise in better understanding the drivers of vaccination and development of more effective programs; however, the application of behavioral science to immunization programs in Nepal is nascent. Through the Behavioral Science Immunization Network, JSI, UNICEF Nepal, and Dhulikhel Hospital–Kathmandu University School of Medical Sciences established a Behavioral Science Center to engage a diverse group of stakeholders in increasing the capacity of practitioners to use behavioral science in immunization programming. As a result of the engagement during formative research, government stakeholders requested and applied tools from behavioral science to solve different immunization challenges. Of particular value was the use of the Journey to Health and Immunization framework, which helped stakeholders identify behavioral and social drivers of zero-dose communities in Kathmandu. Our experience in Nepal demonstrates that there is strong demand for approaches and tools from behavioral science to use in relation to immunization and that this type of engagement model is effective for generating demand for and strengthening capacity to use behavioral science approaches.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10675610
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106756102023-11-10 Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal Castle, Nicole Kunwar, Surakshya Khanal, Leela Oot, Lisa Elkes, Katharine Shrestha, Swechhya Joshi, Anjali Rai, Prasanna Bhattarai, Sanju Karmacharya, Biraj Man Vaccines (Basel) Article Although the Government of Nepal has achieved high and sustained childhood vaccination coverage, reaching under-immunized and zero-dose children requires different approaches. Behavioral science offers promise in better understanding the drivers of vaccination and development of more effective programs; however, the application of behavioral science to immunization programs in Nepal is nascent. Through the Behavioral Science Immunization Network, JSI, UNICEF Nepal, and Dhulikhel Hospital–Kathmandu University School of Medical Sciences established a Behavioral Science Center to engage a diverse group of stakeholders in increasing the capacity of practitioners to use behavioral science in immunization programming. As a result of the engagement during formative research, government stakeholders requested and applied tools from behavioral science to solve different immunization challenges. Of particular value was the use of the Journey to Health and Immunization framework, which helped stakeholders identify behavioral and social drivers of zero-dose communities in Kathmandu. Our experience in Nepal demonstrates that there is strong demand for approaches and tools from behavioral science to use in relation to immunization and that this type of engagement model is effective for generating demand for and strengthening capacity to use behavioral science approaches. MDPI 2023-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10675610/ /pubmed/38006041 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11111709 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Castle, Nicole
Kunwar, Surakshya
Khanal, Leela
Oot, Lisa
Elkes, Katharine
Shrestha, Swechhya
Joshi, Anjali
Rai, Prasanna
Bhattarai, Sanju
Karmacharya, Biraj Man
Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title_full Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title_fullStr Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title_short Using the Journey to Health and Immunization (JTHI) Framework to Engage Stakeholders in Identifying Behavioral and Social Drivers of Routine Immunization in Nepal
title_sort using the journey to health and immunization (jthi) framework to engage stakeholders in identifying behavioral and social drivers of routine immunization in nepal
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10675610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38006041
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11111709
work_keys_str_mv AT castlenicole usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT kunwarsurakshya usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT khanalleela usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT ootlisa usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT elkeskatharine usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT shresthaswechhya usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT joshianjali usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT raiprasanna usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT bhattaraisanju usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal
AT karmacharyabirajman usingthejourneytohealthandimmunizationjthiframeworktoengagestakeholdersinidentifyingbehavioralandsocialdriversofroutineimmunizationinnepal