Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Searches
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Study Characteristics
3.3. Risk of Bias
3.4. Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccines
3.5. Subgroup Analysis
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year, Reference | Country | Study Design | Study Setting | % Ascertained | Vaccine Assessed | Time Points Assessed (days) | Total No. of Infants Assessed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Studies using vaccination cards only | |||||||
Coetzee, 1993 [20] | South Africa | Cross-sectional | Population | 88.0% | BCG | 28 | 421 |
Roth, 2004 [21] | Guinea Bissau | Retrospective cohort | Hospital | 84.2% | BCG | 7 | 7138 |
Jahn, 2008 [22] | Malawi | Cross-sectional | Population | 78.0% | BCG | 7 | 2751 |
Moisi, 2010 [23] | Kenya | Cross-sectional | Population | 86.2% | BCG, OPV0 | 14/28 | 1870 |
Fadnes, 2011 [24] | Uganda | Prospective cohort | Hospital | 98.0% | OPV0 | 28 | 732 |
Adebayo, 2012 [25] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | Population | N/R | BCG, OPV0, HepB-BD | 7 | 440 |
Babirye, 2012 [26] | Uganda | Cross-sectional | Population | 91.2% | OPV0 | 28 | 821 |
Schoeps, 2013 [27] | Burkina Faso | Cross-sectional | Population | N/R | BCG, OPV0 | 28 | 1665 |
Waroux, 2013 [28] | Tanzania | Cross-sectional | Population | 59.0% | BCG | 7 | 1205 |
Calhoun, 2014 [29] | Kenya | Retrospective cohort | Population | 55.3% | BCG, OPV0 | 7/28 | 135 |
Gram, 2014 [30] | Ghana | Prospective cohort | Population | N/R | BCG, OPV0 | 7/14/28 | 20,594 |
Laryea, 2014 [31] | Ghana | Cross-sectional | Hospital | N/R | BCG, OPV0 | 14/28 | 259 |
Sadoh, 2014 [32] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | Hospital | 27.3% | BCG, OPV0, HepB-BD | 7/14/28 | 41 |
Thysen, 2014 [33] | Guinea Bissau | Cross-sectional | Population | 85.0% | BCG | 7/28 | 3020 |
Wagner, 2014 [19] | Sub-Saharan Africa * | Cross-sectional | Population | N/R | BCG | 28 | 102,629 |
Odutola, 2015 [34] | The Gambia | Cross-sectional | Hospital | N/R | BCG | 14 | 1154 |
Lutwama 2014 [35] | Uganda | Cross-sectional | Hospital | N/R | BCG | 0–1 | 92 |
Gibson, 2015 [36] | Kenya | Cross-sectional | Population | 63.9% | BCG | 28 | 1681 |
Miyahara, 2016 [37] | The Gambia | Cross-sectional | Population | 99.8% | HepB-BD | 0–1/7/28 | 10,851 |
O’Leary, 2017 [38] | Ghana | Prospective cohort | Population | 96.5% | BCG | 28 | 22,217 |
Gibson, 2017 [39] | Kenya | Prospective cohort | Population | N/R | BCG | 14 | 360 |
Schweitzer, 2017 [40] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | Population | N/R | HepB-BD | 0–1 | 14,623 |
Zivich, 2017 [41] | Congo | Prospective cohort | Hospital | 93.5% | BCG, OPV0 | 7 | 975 |
Studies using clinical records only | |||||||
Schoub, 1991 [42] | South Africa | Prospective cohort | Hospital | N/R | HepB-BD | 14 | 863 |
Sadoh, 2008 [43] | Nigeria | Retrospective cohort | Hospital | N/R | HepB-BD | 0–1/7/14/ 28 | 512 |
Sadoh, 2009 [44] | Nigeria | Retrospective cohort | Population | N/R | BCG, OPV0, HepB-BD | 14/28 | 493 |
Olusanya, 2010 [45] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | Hospital | 68.9% | BCG | 14 | 5171 |
Sadoh, 2013 [46] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | Hospital | N/R | BCG, OPV0, HepB-BD | 0–1/7/14/ 28 | 153 |
Studies using both vaccination cards and clinical records | |||||||
Borus, 2004 [47] | Kenya | Cross-sectional | Hospital | N/R | OPV0 | 14 | 392 |
Kidane, 2013 [48] | Ethiopia | Cross-sectional | Population | N/R | OPV0 | 14 | 600 |
Hoest, 2017 [49] | South Africa and Tanzania | Prospective cohort | Population | N/R | BCG, OPV0 | 7 | 253 |
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Bassoum, O.; Kimura, M.; Tal Dia, A.; Lemoine, M.; Shimakawa, Y. Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines 2020, 8, 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8020301
Bassoum O, Kimura M, Tal Dia A, Lemoine M, Shimakawa Y. Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines. 2020; 8(2):301. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8020301
Chicago/Turabian StyleBassoum, Oumar, Moe Kimura, Anta Tal Dia, Maud Lemoine, and Yusuke Shimakawa. 2020. "Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Vaccines 8, no. 2: 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8020301
APA StyleBassoum, O., Kimura, M., Tal Dia, A., Lemoine, M., & Shimakawa, Y. (2020). Coverage and Timeliness of Birth Dose Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines, 8(2), 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8020301