학술논문

Setting up a data system for monitoring malaria vaccine introduction readiness and uptake in 42 health districts in Cameroon.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Author
Mboussou F; Vaccine Preventable Diseases, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo franckfortunm@gmail.com.; Ndoula ST; Ministry of Public Health, Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon.; Nembot R; Ministry of Public Health, Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon.; Baonga SF; World Health Organization Country Office for Cameroon, Yaounde, Cameroon.; Njinkeu A; World Health Organization Country Office for Cameroon, Yaounde, Cameroon.; Njoh AA; Ministry of Public Health, Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon.; 4School of Global Health and Bioethics, Euclid University, Bangui, Central African Republic.; Biey JN; Vaccine Preventable Diseases, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo.; Kaba M; World Health Organization Country Office for Cameroon, Yaounde, Cameroon.; Amani A; Vaccine Preventable Diseases, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo.; Farham B; Communicable and Non Communicable Disease Cluster, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Brazzaville, Congo.; Habimana P; World Health Organization Country Office for Cameroon, Yaounde, Cameroon.; Impouma B; Communicable and Non Communicable Disease Cluster, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Brazzaville, Congo.
Source
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd Country of Publication: England NLM ID: 101685275 Publication Model: Electronic Cited Medium: Print ISSN: 2059-7908 (Print) Linking ISSN: 20597908 NLM ISO Abbreviation: BMJ Glob Health Subsets: MEDLINE
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2059-7908
Abstract
Three months after the first shipment of RTS,S1/AS01 vaccines, Cameroon started, on 22 January 2024, to roll out malaria vaccines in 42 districts among the most at risk for malaria. Cameroon adopted and implemented the World Health Organization (WHO) malaria vaccine readiness assessment tool to monitor the implementation of preintroduction activities at the district and national levels. One week before the start of the vaccine rollout, overall readiness was estimated at 89% at a national level with two out of the five components of readiness assessment surpassing 95% of performance (vaccine, cold chain and logistics and training) and three components between 80% and 95% (planning, monitoring and supervision, and advocacy, social mobilisation and communication). 'Vaccine, cold chain and logistics' was the component with the highest number of districts recording below 80% readiness. The South-West and North-West, two regions with a high level of insecurity, were the regions with the highest number of districts that recorded a readiness performance below 80% in the five components. To monitor progress in vaccine rollout daily, Cameroon piloted a system for capturing immunisation data by vaccination session coupled with an interactive dashboard using the R Shiny platform. In addition to displaying data on vaccine uptake, this dashboard allows the generation of the monthly immunisation report for all antigens, ensuring linkage to the regular immunisation data system based on the end-of-month reporting through District Health Information Software 2. Such a hybrid system complies with the malaria vaccine rollout principle of full integration into routine immunisation coupled with strengthened management of operations.
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
(© World Health Organization 2024. Licensee BMJ.)