Article de revue
Yellow fever vaccination coverage heterogeneities in Luanda province, Angola
Although the latest yellow fever outbreak appears to be approaching a close, nearly 2000 suspected and confirmed cases have been reported in Angola since December, 2015.1 Aggressive vaccination campaigns, coordinated by the Angolan Ministry of Health (MOH) and WHO in the highly affected Luanda province, have been crucial to outbreak mitigation; as of April 10, 2016, 5·9 million (90%) individuals of the province-level target population (6·6 million) were reported to have been vaccinated.1
However, pockets of undervaccination pose a potential challenge for disease elimination. Eight of 12 districts in Luanda province vaccinated less than half of their district-level target populations.1 In addition to these heterogeneities in geographical vaccination coverage, susceptibility among individuals throughout the target population (ie, Luanda province) is likely to be heterogeneous as well. For example, because yellow fever is a vector-borne disease, members of the target population who work outdoors might possess a higher risk of infection than those who do not; as a result, the population that is truly susceptible to yellow fever only comprises a fraction of the target population.
If the truly susceptible fraction of the target population is over-represented in currently undervaccinated districts, the outbreak could continue to smoulder, despite a 90% province-level vaccination rate.
Auteurs
Langues
- Anglais
Année de publication
2016
Journal
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
Volume
9
Type
Article de revue
Catégories
- Prestation de services
Maladies
- Fièvre jaune
Pays
- Angola
Mots-clés
- Coverage monitoring
Régions de l'OMS
- Région africaine