1. Effects of Rotavirus Vaccination Coverage among Infants on Hospital Admission for Gastroenteritis across All Age Groups, Japan, 2011-2019.
- Author
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Kishimoto K, Kunisawa S, Fushimi K, and Imanaka Y
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Japan epidemiology, Child, Preschool, Male, Female, Adult, Child, Adolescent, Infant, Newborn, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Aged, Incidence, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, History, 21st Century, Gastroenteritis epidemiology, Gastroenteritis virology, Gastroenteritis prevention & control, Rotavirus Infections prevention & control, Rotavirus Infections epidemiology, Rotavirus Vaccines administration & dosage, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Vaccination Coverage statistics & numerical data, Rotavirus immunology
- Abstract
We assessed the effect of rotavirus vaccination coverage on the number of inpatients with gastroenteritis of all ages in Japan. We identified patients admitted with all-cause gastroenteritis during 2011-2019 using data from the Diagnosis Procedure Combination system in Japan. We used generalized estimating equations with a Poisson distribution, using hospital codes as a cluster variable to estimate the impact of rotavirus vaccination coverage by prefecture on monthly numbers of inpatients with all-cause gastroenteritis. We analyzed 294,108 hospitalizations across 569 hospitals. Higher rotavirus vaccination coverage was associated with reduced gastroenteritis hospitalizations compared with the reference category of vaccination coverage <40% (e.g., for coverage >80%, adjusted incidence rate ratio was 0.87 [95% CI 0.83-0.90]). Our results show that achieving higher rotavirus vaccination coverage among infants could benefit the entire population by reducing overall hospitalizations for gastroenteritis for all age groups.
- Published
- 2024
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