Interventions for improving coverage of childhood immunisation in low- and middle-income countries
CONCLUSIONS: Health education, home-based records, a combination of involvement of community leaders with health provider intervention, and integration of immunisation services may improve vaccine uptake. The certainty of the evidence for the included interventions ranged from moderate to very low. Low certainty of the evidence implies that the true effect of the interventions might be markedly different from the estimated effect. Further, more rigorous RCTs are, therefore, required to generate high-certainty evidence to inform policy and practice.PMID:38054505 | PMC:PMC10698843 | DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD008145.pub4
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - Category: General Medicine Authors: Angela Oyo-Ita Olabisi Oduwole Dachi Arikpo Emmanuel E Effa Ekpereonne B Esu Yusentha Balakrishna Moriam T Chibuzor Chioma M Oringanje Chukwuemeka E Nwachukwu Charles S Wiysonge Martin M Meremikwu Source Type: research
More News: Afghanistan Health | Children | China Health | Databases & Libraries | Education | General Medicine | Georgia Health | Ghana Health | Guatemala Health | Honduras Health | India Health | Indonesia Health | Information Technology | Kenya Health | Malaria | Malaria Vaccine | Mali Health | Mexico Health | Nepal Health | Nicaragua Health | Nigeria Health | Pakistan Health | Rwanda Health | Study | Training | Universities & Medical Training | Vaccines | Zimbabwe Health