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Income-based inequality in full immunization coverage of children aged 12-23 months in Eastern India : A decomposition analysis

Sharma, Shantanu LU ; Maheshwari, Sonali ; Jaiswal, Ajit Kumar and Mehra, Sunil (2021) In Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health 11.
Abstract
Introduction

Notably, less than two-thirds of under-5 children received full immunization in 2016 in India. It is critical to understand the inequalities in access to immunization for determining an effective health policy agenda to ensure universal health coverage. Hence, we performed a study to assess the determinants of income-based inequality in the full immunization of children aged 12–23 using Fairlie decomposition analysis.
Methods

This cross-sectional study was a part of a community-based project that aimed to improve maternal and child health in the backward states of India, namely Bihar and Assam. The study was conducted in the rural and urban areas of Munger and Darrang districts of Bihar and Assam,... (More)
Introduction

Notably, less than two-thirds of under-5 children received full immunization in 2016 in India. It is critical to understand the inequalities in access to immunization for determining an effective health policy agenda to ensure universal health coverage. Hence, we performed a study to assess the determinants of income-based inequality in the full immunization of children aged 12–23 using Fairlie decomposition analysis.
Methods

This cross-sectional study was a part of a community-based project that aimed to improve maternal and child health in the backward states of India, namely Bihar and Assam. The study was conducted in the rural and urban areas of Munger and Darrang districts of Bihar and Assam, respectively. The degree of income-related inequality in full immunization coverage was obtained through the concentration index. The Fairlie decomposition was employed to quantify the absolute contribution of socio-demographic factors explaining the group differences (higher or lower income) in the probability of having full immunization.
Results

There were 73 fully and 82 non-fully immunized children. The concentration curve was lying above the line of equality, which implied that full immunization coverage was concentrated towards the lower-income group. Maternal education (7.5%) and place of residence (5.1%) widened the inequality gap, and caste (−13.5%) and age of the child (−2.5%) narrowed down the inequality gap for full immunization among lower and higher-income groups.
Conclusions

The socio-economic inequalities in access to full immunization can be mitigated by multi-sectoral interventions with a focus on children with less-educated mothers and living in urban slums. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Child mortality, Infant, Vaccination, Vaccine preventable diseases
in
Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health
volume
11
article number
100738
pages
5 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85108221890
ISSN
2213-3984
DOI
10.1016/j.cegh.2021.100738
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fa8c7c28-06d7-4b64-bd6d-c811b82bae31
date added to LUP
2021-06-09 08:39:11
date last changed
2022-04-27 02:20:00
@article{fa8c7c28-06d7-4b64-bd6d-c811b82bae31,
  abstract     = {{Introduction<br/><br/>Notably, less than two-thirds of under-5 children received full immunization in 2016 in India. It is critical to understand the inequalities in access to immunization for determining an effective health policy agenda to ensure universal health coverage. Hence, we performed a study to assess the determinants of income-based inequality in the full immunization of children aged 12–23 using Fairlie decomposition analysis.<br/>Methods<br/><br/>This cross-sectional study was a part of a community-based project that aimed to improve maternal and child health in the backward states of India, namely Bihar and Assam. The study was conducted in the rural and urban areas of Munger and Darrang districts of Bihar and Assam, respectively. The degree of income-related inequality in full immunization coverage was obtained through the concentration index. The Fairlie decomposition was employed to quantify the absolute contribution of socio-demographic factors explaining the group differences (higher or lower income) in the probability of having full immunization.<br/>Results<br/><br/>There were 73 fully and 82 non-fully immunized children. The concentration curve was lying above the line of equality, which implied that full immunization coverage was concentrated towards the lower-income group. Maternal education (7.5%) and place of residence (5.1%) widened the inequality gap, and caste (−13.5%) and age of the child (−2.5%) narrowed down the inequality gap for full immunization among lower and higher-income groups.<br/>Conclusions<br/><br/>The socio-economic inequalities in access to full immunization can be mitigated by multi-sectoral interventions with a focus on children with less-educated mothers and living in urban slums.}},
  author       = {{Sharma, Shantanu and Maheshwari, Sonali and Jaiswal, Ajit Kumar and Mehra, Sunil}},
  issn         = {{2213-3984}},
  keywords     = {{Child mortality; Infant; Vaccination; Vaccine preventable diseases}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health}},
  title        = {{Income-based inequality in full immunization coverage of children aged 12-23 months in Eastern India : A decomposition analysis}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cegh.2021.100738}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.cegh.2021.100738}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}