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Immunization Services. DR. KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI DR .S.K. CHATURVEDI. Objectives. Describe what comprises routine immunization services Components Activities within components Role of a Plan of Action. What is “routine immunization”. No standard definition Hard to define
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Immunization Services DR. KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI DR .S.K. CHATURVEDI
Objectives • Describe what comprises routine immunization services • Components • Activities within components • Role of a Plan of Action
What is “routine immunization” • No standard definition • Hard to define • Means different things to different people • Regional and agency differences • The sum of human and logistical activities/events to ensure the regular delivery & uptake of vaccines & the monitoring of their positive & adverse impact
What is “routine immunization” • Implies the “regular” delivery, i.e., known schedule, of EPI vaccines • Fixed posts &/or outreach • Part of a larger plan • Not time limited • Goal to provide needed vaccines to all eligible persons and to successive birth cohorts
Routine services: Ensuring that all children receive the WHO recommended vaccination schedule
WHO’s Approach: Components of routine immunization systems Vaccine Supply & Quality Logistics Service delivery Advocacy & Communication Surveillance
Components glued together by: • Planning • Management • Coordination • Supervision • Training • Financing Components & “glue” exist at national, provincial, district & local level…. Cascading effect
Activities…………….. Vaccine Supply & Quality • National level • ..Policy on • Procurement • Quality • Local production • National Regulatory Authority • Strategies for international procurement • Timely vaccine ordering • Financial security for purchase • Supply planning (VVMs, vaccines, syringes) • Lower Levels • ..Ordering & supply planning • ..Getting vaccine & supplies to the lower • levels for administration
Activities……… • National Level • .Policy statement & implementation • Injection safety • Health care waste disposal • Cold chain • National central cold store • Vaccine/supply management • Transport management • Supplies, supervision • Lower levels • Vaccine/supply management • Cold chain • Transport • Getting the vaccine to the people Logistics
Activities……. • National level • Policy • Standards & guidelines • Case definitions • Disease, coverage, adverse • events monitoring for nation • Data management systems • Improving data quality • Laboratory Services • Local level • Disease, adverse • events monitoring • Vaccine supply • Vaccination info management • Register • Tally sheets Surveillance
Activities……. • Types of surveillance in EPI • Routine • Generally passive, provides idea on trends, impact of program • Special routine – AFP, fever/rash • Sentinel • Complements weak routine for key diseases • Early warning for outbreaks • Special Surveys • Set baseline disease burden Surveillance
Activities……… • National Level • Technical documents & guidelines • Capacity building • Partnerships with media • Social Mobilization • Local Level • Partnerships with the community • Social Mobilization Advocacy & Communication
Activities………… • National Level • Supporting local level • Local level • Vaccination activities Service delivery
Activities………… Delivery modes - Fixed sites - Outreach - Mobile services - Pulse campaigns - Campaigns Service delivery Each mode has its own advantages & disadvantages, its own indications for use, $$ considerations No single mode is appropriate for all circumstances/diseases
The “glue” 5 key components of EPI 1. Planning 2. Management 3. Coordination 4. Supervision 5. Training 6. Financing Activities to get the job done National provincial district health facility
Monitoring Program Performance • Key indicators (an example) • Coverage levels • Fully vaccinated child, individual antigens • Access to services • BCG and/or DTP1 coverage • Tracking & follow up activities • Dropout - DTP1 to Measles • Median age of receipt of vaccines • Missed opportunities • Cold chain quality • Vaccines at correct temperature • Provider knowledge/practices
Plans of Action (POA) 5 key components of EPI 1. Planning 2. Management 3. Coordination 4. Supervision 5. Training POAs.. ..Detailed & costed activities to ensure adequate implementation of key components and the “glue” … 5 year & 1 year plan … National, provincial, district level plans Must be a living document used to monitor routine immunization services
Plans of Action • Different formats in different countries, regions • Should contain • For each component • Goals/objectives • Key activities • Timeline • Cost • Responsibility • For each type of glue • Key activities • Timeline • Cost
District Plans of Action • Important for efficient service delivery • Similar to national, but with emphasis on • High risk areas • High risk populations • Special activities, e.g., outreach, mobile services • Social promotion • Supervision • Local funding – sources and channels
Inter-agency Coordinating Committee (ICC) • Composition • Example: MOH, WHO, UNICEF, USAID, Rotary, NGOs, etc • Varies by country • Promotes collaboration & cooperation • Prevents • Duplication of activities • Ensures that all activities/components/”glue” are covered and will be addressed in the POA