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Description of vaccination coverage and hesitancy obtained by epidemiological survey of children born in 2017-2018, in Belo Horizonte and Sete Lagoas, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Authors :
Simões TC
Campos Neto OH
França AP
Moraes JC
Silva AID
Ramos AN Jr
França AP
Oliveira ANM
Boing AF
Domingues CMAS
Oliveira CS
Maciel ELN
Guibu IA
Mirabal IRB
Barbosa JC
Lima JC
Moraes JC
Luhm KR
Caetano KAA
Lima LHO
Antunes MBC
Teixeira MDG
Teixeira MDC
Borges MFSO
Queiroz RCS
Gurgel RQ
Barata RB
Azevedo RNC
Oliveira SMDVL
Teles SA
Gama SGND
Mengue SS
Simões TC
Nascimento V
Araújo WN
Source :
Epidemiologia e servicos de saude : revista do Sistema Unico de Saude do Brasil [Epidemiol Serv Saude] 2024 Aug 23; Vol. 33 (spe2), pp. e20231188. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 23 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: To describe vaccination coverage and hesitation for the basic children's schedule in Belo Horizonte and Sete Lagoas, Minas Gerais state, Brazil.<br />Methods: Population-based epidemiological surveys performed from 2020 to 2022, which estimated vaccine coverage by type of immunobiological product and full schedule (valid and ministered doses), according to socioeconomic strata; and reasons for vaccination hesitancy.<br />Results: Overall coverage with valid doses and vaccination hesitancy for at least one vaccine were, respectively, 50.2% (95%CI 44.1;56.2) and 1.6% (95%CI 0.9;2.7), in Belo Horizonte (n = 1,866), and 64.9% (95%CI 56.9;72.1) and 1.0% (95%CI 0.3;2.8), in Sete Lagoas (n = 451), with differences between socioeconomic strata. Fear of severe reactions was the main reason for vaccination hesitancy.<br />Conclusion: Coverage was identified as being below recommended levels for most vaccines. Disinformation should be combated in order to avoid vaccination hesitancy. There is a pressing need to recover coverages, considering public health service access and socioeconomic disparities.<br />Main Results: Vaccination coverage of children up to 4 years old was 50.2% in Belo Horizonte, and 64.9% in Sete Lagoas. Fear of severe reactions and believing that vaccination against eradicated diseases is unnecessary were the main reasons for vaccination hesitancy.<br />Implications for Services: Recovery of high vaccination coverage among children, considering public health service access conditions and socioeconomic inequities. Acting on reasons for hesitancy that can assist in targeting actions.<br />Perspectives: The multifactorial context of vaccination hesitancy demands the development of health education strategies to raise awareness about child immunization.

Details

Language :
English; Portuguese
ISSN :
2237-9622
Volume :
33
Issue :
spe2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Epidemiologia e servicos de saude : revista do Sistema Unico de Saude do Brasil
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39230126
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/S2237-96222024v33e20231188.especial2.en