Ethiopia National Immunization Coverage Survey, Household listing Data, 2012
| Id | EPHI-DS0080 |
|---|---|
| Name | Ethiopia National Immunization Coverage Survey, Household listing Data, 2012 |
| Format | .dta |
| Coverage Location | National ( Two city administrations and nine regional states of Ethiopia) |
| Coverage Sex | Both |
| Abstract | The 2012 Immunization Coverage survey is a multi-stage stratified cluster design cross-sectional national survey. The survey was designed to collect data that is used to commutated immunization coverage estimates at the national and regional levels. Data was collected from target areas such as health facilities, children, caregivers, and mothers using survey tools adapted from demographic and health survey (DHS) tools and Multiple Indicator Survey tools. Of the 3,837 children interviewed and data entered, after cleaning a total of 3,762 caregivers of eligible children from 550 clusters of 11 regions aged 12 - 23 months were analyzed for childhood immunization. A total of 3,843 mothers of children 0-11 months were interviewed from 550 clusters of 11 regions and analyzed for analysis of maternal tetanus immunization; that is 99.8% of the planned sample. Coverage for all antigens tends to be higher in children of caregivers with higher educational attainment, higher wealth, children of first parity, and those residing in urban areas. This survey revealed high drop-out rates in the immunization program. The total unadjusted drop-out rate (card, verification, and history) for DPT-HepB-Hib1-3 was 25.6% nationally, ranging from 2.6% (Addis Ababa) to 63.8% (Somali). Nationwide the proportion of women who delivered in the last year who received at least one dose of TT is 79.9% and who received a second dose is 72.0% conferring immunity for three years. The survey shows that 97.1% of the urban surveyed health facilities and of 89.2% of rural health facilities provide routine immunization services regularly. The survey reveals that Increasing community participation through intensive and extensive health education campaigns may also be required to increase utilization of MCH services in rural areas and increase access and availability of the vaccines. |
| Additional Material | No |
| Keywords |
|
| Recommended | Yes |
| Location | |
| Cleaned | Yes |
| Cleaned Format | . csdb |
| RawFormat | . csdb |
| Comment | |
| Remark | |
| Note | |
| Treatment | |
| Date Data Collection Started | 2012-01-01 |
| Date Data Collection End | 2012-01-30 |
| Title | Ethiopia National Immunization coverage survey(EPI), 2012 |
| Data Type | Survey |
| PublicationYear | 2013 |
| SugestedCitation | There is no Suggested citation by the publisher or producer of a dataset |
| OtherIdType | |
| Description | This data was collected from all households in the cluster, identifying households with eligible children for each target group using the House listing form(form3). Supervisors used this form to randomly select households to interview. Thus, a total of 88,041 houses were listed during the household list part of the sample and 10,445 were eligible houses with mothers of children 0-11 months and 10,114 were eligible houses with children 12-23 months old. The number of HH surveyed was 3,845 in the 12-23-month group and 3,762 in the 0-11 months group. |
| Dataset study design | Longitudinal |
| Date Data Archived | 2019-09-30 |
| Date Data Cataloged | 2020-05-18 |
| Data Generating Unit | Health System and Reproductive Health |
| URL | https://rtds.ephi.gov.et/public/showdetail/80 |
| Tags |
|
Open Access
