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Routine Childhood Immunizations in the U.S.: Current Trends and Recommendations for Realizing Vaccine Equity

This entry is part 7 of 11 in the series Jan 2024

This post looks at examining current trends in routine childhood vaccination in the US and provides recommendations to address long standing disparities to achieve vaccine equity.

Read the Article

Childhood vaccination rates in the U.S. have been declining since the beginning of the pandemic, with Black and Hispanic children, those with lower socioeconomic status, and those in rural areas seeing the most significant declines. In the article, Achieving Equity in Childhood Vaccination: A Mixed-Methods Study of Immunization Programs, Policies, and Coverage in 3 U.S. States,” researchers from the University of Washington Population Health Initiative used a mixed-methods study to understand immunization patterns across socioeconomic and racial/ethnic groups over 12 years to identify local interventions and policies that contribute to improving immunization equity. They also sought to understand whether any lessons learned from COVID-19 vaccine interventions could be used to improve childhood vaccine coverage.

The project had three areas of focus:

  1. They identified three states, and three representative counties within each state that had realized the most progress, least progress, and a median amount of progress in improving childhood vaccination racial equity over the past 12 years. They defined vaccine equity as all eligible children having fair access to routine childhood vaccinations and utilized National Immunization Survey – Child public-use data sets (2007 and 2019) and used logistic regression to calculate the probability of children aged 19 months to 3 years being fully vaccinated to identify trends and geographic areas of interest.
  2. They interviewed key stakeholders – such as public health departments, offices for vaccine programming, Vaccines for Children program providers, community-based organizations, and academic researchers – across the three states and nine counties to identify which interventions or public policies were believed to have most effectively improved racial vaccination equity.
  3. They analyzed the stakeholder interviews to identify features of interventions, programs, procedures, or policies that offer seemingly translatable benefits to other vaccine-preventable diseases to help inform public health practice.

Study Findings

Recommendations

This study recommends how federal, state, and local government agencies can help address declining childhood vaccination trends. Health agencies should examine their childhood vaccine policies and consider new policies to improve data collection, tracking, and sharing. The findings should encourage public health professionals to learn from the lessons of the COVID-19 pandemic response, including building trusting partnerships, expanding funding and capacity, and improving data quality. Further, state and local agencies must be able to monitor and disaggregate data by race and ethnicity in order to identify and address ongoing disparities. 


Ali H. Mokdad, PhD, is a Professor of Health Metrics Sciences at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and Chief Strategy Officer of Population Health at the University of Washington. Trained as an epidemiologist, he is a renowned expert in health surveys, surveillance systems, and small-area estimation, particularly for risk factor measurement and analysis.

India J. Ornelas, PhD, is interim chair and professor of health systems and population health at the University of Washington. Her research focuses on understanding how social and cultural factors influence the health of Latino and American Indian communities.

Kaitlin (Quirk) Brumbaugh, MPA, is a Research Coordinator at the University of Washington Population Health Initiative, where she works on several investigations of the barriers and potential solutions to improve immunization coverage. She previously worked for a community-based organization, managing various community health programs and conducting community engagement.

Jan 2024

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