Impact of campaign-style delivery of routine vaccines: a quasi-experimental evaluation using routine health services data in India

Author:

Clarke-Deelder Emma1,Suharlim Christian23,Chatterjee Susmita45ORCID,Brenzel Logan6,Ray Arindam7,Cohen Jessica L1,McConnell Margaret1ORCID,Resch Stephen C2,Menzies Nicolas A12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, 665 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115 USA

2. Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, 718 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02115, USA

3. Management Sciences for Health, 200 Rivers Edge Dr, Medford MA 02155, USA

4. Research Department, George Institute for Global Health, 308-309 Elegance Tower, Plot No. 8, Jasola District Centre, New Delhi -110025, India

5. Department of Medicine, University of New South Wales, 18 High Street, Kensington, New South Wales, 2052, Australia

6. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 500 5th Ave N, Seattle, WA 98109, USA

7. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Capital Court, The 5th Floor, Olof Palme Marg, Munirka, New Delhi, Delhi 110067, India

Abstract

Abstract The world is not on track to achieve the goals for immunization coverage and equity described by the World Health Organization’s Global Vaccine Action Plan. Many countries struggle to increase coverage of routine vaccination, and there is little evidence about how to do so effectively. In India in 2016, only 62% of children had received a full course of basic vaccines. In response, in 2017–18 the government implemented Intensified Mission Indradhanush (IMI), a nationwide effort to improve coverage and equity using a campaign-style strategy. Campaign-style approaches to routine vaccine delivery like IMI, sometimes called ‘periodic intensification of routine immunization’ (PIRI), are widely used, but there is little robust evidence on their effectiveness. We conducted a quasi-experimental evaluation of IMI using routine data on vaccine doses delivered, comparing districts participating and not participating in IMI. Our sample included all districts that could be merged with India’s 2016 Demographic and Health Surveys data and had available data for the full study period. We used controlled interrupted time-series analysis to estimate the impact of IMI during the 4-month implementation period and in subsequent months. This method assumes that, if IMI had not occurred, vaccination trends would have changed in the same way in the participating and not participating districts. We found that, during implementation, IMI increased delivery of 13 infant vaccines, with a median effect of 10.6% (95% confidence interval 5.1% to 16.5%). We did not find evidence of a sustained effect during the 8 months after implementation ended. Over the 12 months from the beginning of implementation, we estimated reductions in the number of under-immunized children that were large but not statistically significant, ranging from 3.9% (−6.9% to 13.7%) to 35.7% (−7.5% to 77.4%) for different vaccines. The largest effects were for the first doses of vaccines against diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis and polio: IMI reached approximately one-third of children who would otherwise not have received these vaccines. This suggests that PIRI can be successful in increasing routine immunization coverage, particularly for early infant vaccines, but other approaches may be needed for sustained coverage improvements.

Funder

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy

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