1. Policy options for state-based PCV rollout in India: The evidence base.
- Author
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Sauer, M., Singh, A., and Privor-Dumm, L.
- Subjects
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PNEUMOCOCCAL vaccines , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *HEALTH policy , *CHILD mortality , *PNEUMONIA in children , *MENINGITIS in children - Abstract
Background: One in five child deaths occur in India; pneumonia and meningitis are major causes. Among Indian children aged 1-59 months, more than 160,000 deaths were attributed to pneumonia or meningitis in 2015. Pneumococcus is the most common cause of bacterial pneumonia, responsible for one-third of child pneumonia deaths. It is vaccine-preventable and more than 130 countries have introduced PCV into their national immunization programs. In these countries, routine PCV use has virtually eliminated vaccineserotype pneumococcal pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal disease, and reduced severe pneumonia and all-cause mortality. However, PCV is not currently part of India's Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP). The relative health need and rollout feasibility in each of Indian state was analyzed to develop policy options for rollout. Methods & Materials: This analysis considered indicators of disease burden and mortality, access to and equity of care, governance, vaccine coverage, rollout capacity, and surveillance capacity. Using available data, these indicators may be assessed and ranked in identifying which states to include in the initial cohort. Results: Policy options were identified based on the relative ranking of each state on need and immediate feasibility. Under each selection strategy--need only, immediate feasibility only, need and feasibility, and surveillance capacity--we assumed an initial rollout of 20% of the birth cohort. We applied DTP3 coverage to state birth cohorts for an estimate on coverage under rollout scenarios. Under a need-based selection process, fewer states would be able to introduce because of large size of the high need state populations. Conversely, under a feasibility-based process the rollout cohort could include 15-20 states; states with high immediate feasibility are significantly smaller. Conclusion: Introducing PCV into India's UIP has the potential to dramatically impact child morbidity and mortality. Decisions around resource allocation depend on India's priorities and needs; analyzing state-level need and feasibility can inform state selection through a structured data approach. Using available data to rank states on key indicators allows for evidence-based policy options to identify states for the initial rollout cohort. In selecting states for initial phases of a potential PCV introduction, the Government of India may use all or part of these options. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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