학술논문

Local measles vaccination gaps in Germany and the role of vaccination providers.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BMC Public Health. 8/14/2017, Vol. 17, p1-8. 8p. 2 Charts, 1 Graph, 1 Map.
Subject
*MEASLES prevention
*PUBLIC health
*KINDERGARTEN facilities
*VACCINATION of children
*VACCINES
*PREVENTION of epidemics
*MEASLES vaccines
*EPIDEMICS
*IMMUNIZATION
*MEDICAL protocols
*SCHOOLS
Language
ISSN
1471-2458
Abstract
Background: Measles elimination in Europe is an urgent public health goal, yet despite the efforts of its member states, vaccination gaps and outbreaks occur. This study explores local vaccination heterogeneity in kindergartens and municipalities of a German county.Methods: Data on children from mandatory school enrolment examinations in 2014/15 in Reutlingen county were used. Children with unknown vaccination status were either removed from the analysis (best case) or assumed to be unvaccinated (worst case). Vaccination data were translated into expected outbreak probabilities. Physicians and kindergartens with statistically outstanding numbers of under-vaccinated children were identified.Results: A total of 170 (7.1%) of 2388 children did not provide a vaccination certificate; 88.3% (worst case) or 95.1% (best case) were vaccinated at least once against measles. Based on the worst case vaccination coverage, <10% of municipalities and <20% of kindergartens were sufficiently vaccinated to be protected against outbreaks. Excluding children without a vaccination certificate (best case) leads to over-optimistic views: the overall outbreak probability in case of a measles introduction lies between 39.5% (best case) and 73.0% (worst case). Four paediatricians were identified who accounted for 41 of 109 unvaccinated children and for 47 of 138 incomplete vaccinations; GPs showed significantly higher rates of missing vaccination certificates and unvaccinated or under-vaccinated children than paediatricians.Conclusions: Missing vaccination certificates pose a severe problem regarding the interpretability of vaccination data. Although the coverage for at least one measles vaccination is higher in the studied county than in most South German counties and higher than the European average, many severe and potentially dangerous vaccination gaps occur locally. If other federal German states and EU countries show similar vaccination variability, measles elimination may not succeed in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]