Concordance of coverage estimates from routine and survey data of measles second dose vaccine in Western Kenya

AK Moturi, MM Musau, SK Muchiri, PM Macharia, RW Snow, EA Okiro

Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

Abstract

Background:
Missed opportunities for key vaccinations continue to exacerbate disease outbreaks. Accurately monitoring immunisation coverage is fundamental to identifying gaps in vaccine delivery and informing timely action. This study assesses the agreement between routine and survey-based coverage estimates for the second dose of the measles vaccine (MCV2) in Western Kenya.
Methods:
This study utilised model-based geostatistics estimates MCV2 coverage from the 2022 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), monthly immunisation data from routine health information systems (2019–2022) imputed for missingness and population data from WorldPop for 2019 across 62 Western Kenyan subnational areas (sub-counties). Routine MCV2 coverage was computed using MCV2 doses as a numerator and two separate denominators: (i) Pentavalent 1 doses to account for children already receiving prior vaccines at health facilities (service-based coverage) and (ii) surviving infants to account for all eligible children (population-based coverage). Concordance was assessed using the 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of survey-modelled estimates, intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC), and Bland-Altman (BA) plots.
Results:
Survey-modelled estimates differed substantially in 55 (89%) and 39 (63%) sub-counties compared to population and service-based coverage estimates respectively. The different approaches showed poor congruence in survey-modelled vs. population-based coverage estimates (ICC: 0.10, p = 0.229) and survey-modelled vs. service-based coverage estimates (ICC: 0.42, p = <0.001); there was moderate congruence of population vs. service-based coverage estimates (ICC: 0.65, p = <0.001). Survey-modelled vs. population-based coverage estimates showed the highest bias in BA plots of 18.80 percent points (p.p) compared to 11.02 p.p. and 7.79 p.p. between survey-modelled vs. service-based coverage and population vs. service-based coverage estimates, respectively.
Conclusions:
Substantial discrepancies among survey-modelled, routine population, and service-based coverage estimates expose important variations in each approaches’ results. While all approaches offer distinct insights, improving survey models, routine data quality and refining estimates of population catchment is imperative for reliable fine-scale vaccine delivery monitoring.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1663372
JournalFrontiers in epidemiology
Volume5
Number of pages13
ISSN2674-1199
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Child immunisation
  • Demographic and health surveillance
  • Geostatistical modelling
  • Measles
  • Routine health data

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