Euvichol-plus vaccine campaign coverage during the 2017/2018 cholera outbreak in Lusaka district, Zambia: a cross-sectional descriptive study

Author:

Mukonka Victor M,Sialubanje CephasORCID,Matapo Belem Blamwell,Chewe Orbrie,Ngomah Albertina MoraesORCID,Ngosa Willaim,Hamoonga Raymond,Sinyange Nyambe,Mzyece Hannah,Mazyanga Lucy,Bakyaita Nathan,Kapata Nathan

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the coverage for the oral cholera vaccine (OCV) campaign conducted during the 2017/2018 cholera outbreak in Lusaka, Zambia.Study designA descriptive cross-sectional study employing survey method conducted among 1691 respondents from 369 households following the second round of the 2018 OCV campaign.Study settingFour primary healthcare facilities and their catchment areas in Lusaka city (Kanyama, Chawama, Chipata and Matero subdistricts).ParticipantsA total of 1691 respondents 12 months and older sampled from 369 households where the campaign was conducted. A satellite map-based sampling technique was used to randomly select households.Data management and analysisA pretested electronic questionnaire uploaded on an electronic tablet (ODK V.1.12.2) was used for data collection. Descriptive statistics were computed to summarise respondents’ characteristics and OCV coverage per dose. Bivariate analysis (χ2test) was conducted to stratify OCV coverage according to age and sex for each round (p<0.05).ResultsThe overall coverage for the first, second and two doses were 81.3% (95% CI 79.24% to 83.36%), 72.1% (95% CI 69.58% to 74.62%) and 66% (95% CI 63.22% to 68.78%), respectively. The drop-out rate was 18.8% (95% CI 14.51% to 23.09%). Of the 81.3% who received the first dose, 58.8% were female. Among those who received the second dose, the majority (61.0%) were females aged between 5 and 14 years (42.6%) and 15 and 35 years (27.7%). Only 15.5% of the participants aged between 36 and 65 and 2.5% among those aged above 65 years received the second dose.ConclusionThese findings confirm the 2018 OCV campaign coverage and highlight the need for follow-up surveys to validate administrative coverage estimates using population-based methods. Reliance on health facility data alone may mask low coverage and prevent measures to improve programming. Future public health interventions should consider sociodemographic factors in order to achieve optimal vaccine coverage.

Funder

World Health Organization

Ministry of Health, British Columbia

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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