2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.08.077
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Vaccination coverage survey versus administrative data in the assessment of mass yellow fever immunization in internally displaced persons—Liberia, 2004

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Cited by 35 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…In 2004, 2 yellow fever mass vaccination campaigns were launched in IDP camps and surrounding communities in Liberia after reports of 4 lab-confirmed cases. 33 Due to the 14 years of civil war, much of Liberia's healthcare infrastructure, public health disease surveillance, and immunization programs were severely disrupted. Survey assessment of vaccination coverage reported 90% by selfreport and 80% by proof of vaccination card.…”
Section: Yellow Fevermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In 2004, 2 yellow fever mass vaccination campaigns were launched in IDP camps and surrounding communities in Liberia after reports of 4 lab-confirmed cases. 33 Due to the 14 years of civil war, much of Liberia's healthcare infrastructure, public health disease surveillance, and immunization programs were severely disrupted. Survey assessment of vaccination coverage reported 90% by selfreport and 80% by proof of vaccination card.…”
Section: Yellow Fevermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The success of the mass vaccination efforts among IDPs required intensive social mobilization, efficient logistical networks, well-trained health staff, and safe vaccine delivery. 33 During a time Liberian and Sierra Leonean refugees and IDPs were in Guinea, a yellow fever outbreak was reported with 688 cases and 225 deaths (CFR 33%) in 2000. 34 Movement through the forested areas of Guinea where yellow fever is endemic into densely-populated camps and urban areas may have led to increased transmission.…”
Section: Yellow Fevermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This method can provide information on coverage by geographic area if the population of subareas is available and the origin of the children vaccinated is known. If population figures are inaccurate, this method leads to either an overestimate (Zuber et al, 2003) or underestimate (Huhn et al, 2006). Overestimation can result in part of the population remaining at risk of the disease; underestimation may result in the organisation of unnecessary public health measures, such as follow-up vaccination campaigns.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…dividing the number of individual vaccine doses administered by the target population) is notoriously unreliable, with estimates commonly reaching > 100%. 3,4 Incomplete tallying or reporting of the number of doses administered can bias the results, as can poorly documented shifts in population, reliance on outdated census data and vaccination of individuals outside the targeted age group or geographic area. Probability-based surveys avoid these problems.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%