Vaccine
Volume 30, Issue 39, 2012, Pages 5721-5725

Gaps in the 2010 measles SIA coverage among migrant children in Beijing: Evidence from a parental survey (Article)

Hu X. , Xiao S. , Chen B. , Sa Z.*
  • a School of Social Development and Public Policy, Institute of Migration and Urbanization, Beijing Normal University, China
  • b School of Social Development and Public Policy, Institute of Migration and Urbanization, Beijing Normal University, China
  • c School of Social Development and Public Policy, Institute of Migration and Urbanization, Beijing Normal University, China
  • d School of Social Development and Public Policy, Institute of Migration and Urbanization, Beijing Normal University, China

Abstract

China suffers from high incidence of measles partly due to high population mobility and low vaccination rates among migrants. In this study, we assessed the vaccination coverage of the nationwide measles supplementary immunization activity (SIA) of 2010 and its determinants among migrant children in Beijing. Information was collected through face-to-face interviews with the caregivers of 589 migrant children at train and long-distance bus stations in January 2011, when migrants were traveling home for the Chinese New Year holiday. We estimated that 83.4% of migrant children aged 8 months to 14 years received the measles vaccine during the SIA. This estimated coverage is lower than the official report of 96% among all eligible children in Beijing. Factors associated with being unvaccinated through the SIA included children being at home or in the kindergarten, living in a single-child family, and having a parent who was unaware of the SIA or who had a low level of trust in the government-administered measles campaign. We recommend more focused targeting on migrant children in future measles vaccination campaigns, improved immunization service delivery in unregulated migrant-run kindergartens and at the community level, as well as development of more effective communication methods to reach disadvantaged migrants. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.

Author Keywords

China measles Migrant Children Risk factor Vaccination coverage SIA

Index Keywords

Parents China leisure home interpersonal communication human clinical assessment railway priority journal Family Characteristics interview school child kindergarten Humans Adolescent male preschool child female Infant Child, Preschool measles vaccination Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Article measles vaccine migration information system government Immunization Programs Transients and Migrants vaccination immunization measles caregiver Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84864950704&doi=10.1016%2fj.vaccine.2012.07.007&partnerID=40&md5=44e2cf469c5a8bd56ff5be24f07351de

DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2012.07.007
ISSN: 0264410X
Cited by: 16
Original Language: English