Issues in pediatric vaccine-preventable diseases in low- to middle-income countries
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Taylor and Francis Inc.
Abstract
The highest burden of pediatric vaccine-preventable disease is found in developing nations where resource constraints pose the greatest challenge, impacting disease diagnosis and surveillance as well as the implementation of large scale vaccination programmes. In November 2012, a Working Group Meeting convened in Casablanca to describe and discuss the status with respect to 8 vaccine-preventable diseases (pertussis, pneumococcal disease, measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV), rotavirus and meningococcal meningitis) to identify and consider ways of overcoming obstacles to pediatric vaccine implementation. Experts from Europe, Russia, the Commonwealth of Independent States, the Middle East, Africa and South East Asia participated in the meeting. A range of region-specific needs and barriers to uptake were discussed. The aim of this article is to provide a summary of the ongoing status with respect to pediatric vaccine preventable disease in the countries represented, and the experts' opinions and recommendations with respect to pediatric vaccine implementation. © 2016 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis © Ghassan Dbaibo, Vladimir Tatochenko, and Peter Wutzler.
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Keywords
Barriers, Developing countries, Pediatric vaccines, Vaccine implementation, Vaccine-preventable disease, Communicable diseases, Disease transmission, infectious, Health services accessibility, Humans, Immunization programs, Vaccination, Vaccines, Chickenpox measles mumps rubella vaccine, Chickenpox vaccine, Diphtheria pertussis tetanus vaccine, Meningococcus vaccine, Pneumococcus vaccine, Rotavirus vaccine, Vaccine, Childhood mortality, Clinical effectiveness, Disease control, Disease surveillance, Drug efficacy, Health care facility, Health care personnel, Health care planning, Hospitalization, Human, Pertussis, Phase 3 clinical trial (topic), Pneumococcal infection, Polymerase chain reaction, Public health, Review, Clinical observation, Clinical study, Developing country, Diagnosis, Disease transmission, Health care delivery, Organization and management, Prevention and control, Preventive health service, Utilization