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Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe

Socioeconomic inequalities in health have received significant attention globally because of the well-known association between wealth and health. A lot of studies show that poor people are more prone to sickness than their counterparts. Immunisation has been a key antidote to avert deaths for child...

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Main Author: Chigwenah, Tariro
Other Authors: Ataguba, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chigwenah, Tariro
author2 Ataguba, John
author_browse Ataguba, John
Chigwenah, Tariro
author_facet Ataguba, John
Chigwenah, Tariro
author_sort Chigwenah, Tariro
collection Thesis
description Socioeconomic inequalities in health have received significant attention globally because of the well-known association between wealth and health. A lot of studies show that poor people are more prone to sickness than their counterparts. Immunisation has been a key antidote to avert deaths for children under the age of 5. This study represents an initial attempt to assess specific variables that contribute to socioeconomic inequalities in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe. Data were obtained from the 2015 Zimbabwe Demographic Health Survey, a nationally representative survey. Immunisation coverage was measured using four categories: full immunisation (a child who will have received 10 doses of vaccines), partial immunisation (a child who will have received at least one but not all vaccines), no immunisation (a child who will not have received any immunisation dose from birth) and immunisation intensity (a proportion of doses received to total doses that they should have received). Inequalities in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe were assessed using concentration curves and indices. A positive (negative) concentration index indicates immunisation coverage concentrated among the rich (poor). The concentration index was decomposed to identify how different variables contribute to the socioeconomic inequality in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe. Results indicate that immunisation intensity and full immunisation concentration indices were (0.0154) and (0.0250) respectively, indicating that children from lower socio-economic status are less likely to receive all doses of vaccines. No immunisation and partial immunisation concentration indices were (-0.0778) and (-0.0878) indicating that children from higher socioeconomic status are more likely to have their children immunised opposed to their poor counterparts. The main contributors to socioeconomic inequality in immunisation coverage are the mother's education, socioeconomic status and place of residence (rural/urban and province). While immunisation services are free of charge in the public health sector in Zimbabwe, coverage rates are higher among the wealthy, which shows that there may be barriers to utilising these services that may not be the direct cost of vaccination. There have to be measures by the government to reach people in areas that are not easily accessible. Also, more needs to be done to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in Zimbabwe.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32533 Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe Chigwenah, Tariro Ataguba, John Health Economics Socioeconomic inequalities in health have received significant attention globally because of the well-known association between wealth and health. A lot of studies show that poor people are more prone to sickness than their counterparts. Immunisation has been a key antidote to avert deaths for children under the age of 5. This study represents an initial attempt to assess specific variables that contribute to socioeconomic inequalities in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe. Data were obtained from the 2015 Zimbabwe Demographic Health Survey, a nationally representative survey. Immunisation coverage was measured using four categories: full immunisation (a child who will have received 10 doses of vaccines), partial immunisation (a child who will have received at least one but not all vaccines), no immunisation (a child who will not have received any immunisation dose from birth) and immunisation intensity (a proportion of doses received to total doses that they should have received). Inequalities in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe were assessed using concentration curves and indices. A positive (negative) concentration index indicates immunisation coverage concentrated among the rich (poor). The concentration index was decomposed to identify how different variables contribute to the socioeconomic inequality in immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe. Results indicate that immunisation intensity and full immunisation concentration indices were (0.0154) and (0.0250) respectively, indicating that children from lower socio-economic status are less likely to receive all doses of vaccines. No immunisation and partial immunisation concentration indices were (-0.0778) and (-0.0878) indicating that children from higher socioeconomic status are more likely to have their children immunised opposed to their poor counterparts. The main contributors to socioeconomic inequality in immunisation coverage are the mother's education, socioeconomic status and place of residence (rural/urban and province). While immunisation services are free of charge in the public health sector in Zimbabwe, coverage rates are higher among the wealthy, which shows that there may be barriers to utilising these services that may not be the direct cost of vaccination. There have to be measures by the government to reach people in areas that are not easily accessible. Also, more needs to be done to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in Zimbabwe. 2021-01-15T09:53:12Z 2021-01-15T09:53:12Z 2020 Master Thesis Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32533 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Health Economics Unit Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Health Economics
Chigwenah, Tariro
Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
title_full Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
title_short Explaining the socio-economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in Zimbabwe
title_sort explaining the socio economic inequalities in child immunisation coverage in zimbabwe
topic Health Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32533
work_keys_str_mv AT chigwenahtariro explainingthesocioeconomicinequalitiesinchildimmunisationcoverageinzimbabwe