Article de revue

The power of historical data for assessment of childhood vaccine benefits

The Expanded Program of Immunization (EPI) led by WHO and UNICEF has recently celebrated its 40th anniversary and the profound increase of childhood vaccination coverage globally to more than 80%.1 However, translation of this achievement into an estimate of deaths averted is daunting because of a shortage of demographic and epidemiological data in most resource-poor settings, and the rapidly changing landscape of disease mortality.2 A complementary approach to such estimations is to analyse historical data from European nations, where classic EPI vaccines were introduced in the 1950s and epidemiological records abound.

Langues

  • Anglais

Année de publication

2016

Journal

The Lancet Infectious Diseases

Volume

5

Type

Article de revue

Catégories

  • Prestation de services

Maladies

  • Polio

Mots-clés

  • Suivi de la couverture
  • Qualité des données
  • Rapport de données
  • Suivi de performance

Ajouté par: Moderator

Ajouté le: 2016-05-05 05:46:21

Consultations: 1651