Longitudinal profiling of the vaccination coverage in Brazil reveals a recent change in the patterns hallmarked by differential reduction across regions
Autor
Césare, Nathaly
Mota, Tiago F.
Lopes, Fernanda F.L.
Lima, Ana Claudia M.
Luzardo, Ricardo
Quintanilha, Luiz Fernando
Andrade, Bruno B.
Queiroz, Artur T.L.
Fukutani, Kiyoshi F.
Institución
Resumen
Objective: Vaccination coverage is decreasing worldwide, favoring potential reemergence of
vaccine-preventable disease. Here, we performed a longitudinal characterization of the
vaccination coverage in Brazil and compared the profiles between the distinct regions in the
country to test whether there has been a substantial change over the last five years.
Methods: We retrieved de-identified data publicly available from the repository of the
Brazilian Ministry of Health, comprising detailed information on vaccination coverage, in all
age groups, between 1994 and 2019. We examined the vaccination coverage from the
whole country and each Brazilian region, by year, and performed a time-series pattern
analysis.
Results: A significant decrease in overall vaccination coverage across the country regions
was observed between 2017 and 2019, especially in childhood immunization. BCG,
Hepatitis B, influenza and rotavirus vaccines displayed a reduction in coverage. Conversely,
vaccines against measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, and meningococcus had an increase in
coverage. Region-specific changes in vaccination patterns within the study period were
observed.
Conclusions: Substantial reduction in vaccination coverage was detected in Brazil, a
country already highly susceptible to emergency of epidemic infectious diseases.
Recursively evaluation of the immunization program actions may help to improve vaccination
coverage and prevent new epidemics.