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The impact of polio eradication on routine immunization and primary health care: a mixed-methods study

Authors :
Kenneth Maes
Thomas M. Parris
Ranjani Gopinath
Elizabeth Nuttall
Laetitia Nyirazinyoye
Anat Rosenthal
Svea Closser
Rashid Jooma
Matthew A. Luck
W. Frank Pont
Ismaila Zango Mohammed
Naveen Thacker
Pauley Tedoff
Vanessa Neergheen
Emma Varley
Hailom Banteyerga Amaha
Judith Justice
Kelly Cox
R. Matthew Landis
Patricia A. Omidian
Adam D. Koon
Peter Nsubuga
Aminu Mohammed Dukku
Source :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

BACKGROUND: After 2 decades of focused efforts to eradicate polio, the impact of eradication activities on health systems continues to be controversial. This study evaluated the impact of polio eradication activities on routine immunization (RI) and primary healthcare (PHC). METHODS: Quantitative analysis assessed the effects of polio eradication campaigns on RI and maternal healthcare coverage. A systematic qualitative analysis in 7 countries in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa assessed impacts of polio eradication activities on key health system functions, using data from interviews, participant observation, and document review. RESULTS: Our quantitative analysis did not find compelling evidence of widespread and significant effects of polio eradication campaigns, either positive or negative, on measures of RI and maternal healthcare. Our qualitative analysis revealed context-specific positive impacts of polio eradication activities in many of our case studies, particularly disease surveillance and cold chain strengthening. These impacts were dependent on the initiative of policy makers. Negative impacts, including service interruption and public dissatisfaction, were observed primarily in districts with many campaigns per year. CONCLUSIONS: Polio eradication activities can provide support for RI and PHC, but many opportunities to do so remain missed. Increased commitment to scaling up best practices could lead to significant positive impacts.

Details

ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
210
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd72abe9abb0637a02b4ff238cf48fc7