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Origins, design and implementation of the China GAVI project

Authors :
Yuansheng Chen
Huiming Luo
Weizhong Yang
Yu Wang
Stephen C. Hadler
Xiaofeng Liang
Mark A. Kane
Fuqiang Cui
Xiaojun Wang
Craig N. Shapiro
Source :
Vaccine. 31
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

China received GAVI support for hepatitis B vaccination in 2001 because of high disease burden and strong government will to protect infants at risk. The China/GAVI project, implemented since 2002, was funded 50% by GAVI and 50% by the Government of China. The purpose of the project was to increase coverage of hepatitis B vaccine through a pro-poor approach targeting all counties of the 12 Western provinces and poverty counties of the 10 Central provinces, to accelerate integration of hepatitis B vaccine into routine immunization, and assure immunization injection safety. The mechanism of internal coordination among multiple government entities and international cooperation was established and comprehensive strategies were used to improve vaccine coverage and injection safety. After 8 years of implementation, 193,000 health care workers in 118,316 health care facilities participated in the project, mostly at the township hospitals level (55,051) and in community centres (104,547). Through the China GAVI project, the 85% HepB3 coverage goal was reached in 98% of GAVI China project counties, the 75% timely birth dose (TBD) coverage goal was reached in 80% of GAVI project counties, and AD syringes were introduced into 100% of GAVI-supported areas. Additionally, the GAVI project was instrumental in convincing the Chinese Government to sustainably introduce and fully fund HepB vaccine for all newborns in China. The impact of hepB vaccination on HBsAg prevalence was observed throughout China, as HBsAg prevalence (previously ∼10%) is now less than 1% among children under 5 years of age.

Details

ISSN :
18732518
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vaccine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb16e13e28818a098c274691022eb074