Childhood immunization coverage in zone 3 of Dhaka City: the challenge of reaching impoverished households in urban Bangladesh.
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 76 (6) , 565-73
Abstract
A household survey of 651 children aged 12-23 months in Zone 3 of Dhaka City carried out in 1995 revealed that 51% of them had fully completed the series of childhood immunizations. Immunization coverage in slum households was only half that in non-slum households. Apart from residence in a slum household, other characteristics strongly associated with the completion of the entire series of childhood immunizations included the following: educational level of the mother, number of children in the family household, mother's employment status, distance from the nearest immunization site, and number of home visits from family-planning field workers. The findings point to the need to improve childhood immunization promotion and service delivery among slum populations. Two promising strategies for improving coverage are to reduce the number of missed opportunities for immunization promotion during encounters between health workers and clients, and to identify through visits to households those children who need additional immunizations. In the long run, increasing the educational level of women will provide a strong stimulus for improving childhood immunization coverage in the population.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tetanus toxoid immunization coverage among women in zone 3 of Dhaka city: the challenge of reaching all women of reproductive age in urban Bangladesh.1998
- Gender preference and birth spacing in matlab, BangladeshDemography, 1993
- Factors influencing childhood immunisation in an urban area of Brazil.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1992
- An evaluation of the national measles vaccination campaign in the new shanty areas of Khayelitsha.1991
- Measles epidemic in Harare, Zimbabwe, despite high measles immunization coverage rates.1991
- Maternal Education and Child ImmunizationDemography, 1990
- Application of multiple methods to study the immunization programme in an urban area of Guinea.1990
- Health Programme Effects Upon Acceptance of Immunisation in Northeast ThailandAsia-Pacific journal of public health, 1989
- Social factors affecting use of immunization in IndonesiaSocial Science & Medicine, 1988
- Factors affecting the use of primary health care clinics for children.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1982