Childhood immunisation coverage reported at 12 to <15 months and 2 years of age, may mask deficiencies in the timeliness of vaccines designed to protect against diseases in infancy. This study aimed to evaluate immunisation timeliness in Indigenous infants in the Northern Territory, Australia. Coverage was analysed at the date children turned 7, 13 and 18 months of age. By 7 months of age, 45.2% of children had completed the recommended schedule, increasing to 49.5% and 81.2% at 13 and 18 months of age, respectively. Immunisation performance benchmarks must focus on improving the timeliness in these children in the first year of life
Background. Australian Indigenous children are the only population worldwide to receive the 7-valent...
Abstract Objective: To assess the level of underreporting to the Australian Childhood Immunisation R...
In Australia, we used the World Health Organization’s Tailoring Immunization Programmes to identify ...
Background - To evaluate immunisation coverage, timeliness and predictors of delayed receipt in urba...
Objectives: To obtain, through a survey, estimates of immunisation coverage in a birth cohort of ...
Aim The aim of this study is to examine the age-appropriate immunisation coverage and the factors as...
Abstract Objective: To estimate immunisation coverage for routinely administered vaccines among chil...
Abstract Background Improving timely immunisation is key to closing the inequitable gap in immunisat...
© 2018 Reported infant vaccination coverage at age 12 months in Australia is > 90%. On-time cove...
Full list of author information is available at the end of the articlebenchmark of program effective...
Background: Delayed immunisation and vaccine preventable communicable disease remains a significant ...
Introduction Immunisation coverage is a good measure of immunisation program effectiveness. Coverage...
Background: Immunisation timeliness continues to present challenges to achieving optimal vaccine cov...
Background: Improving timely immunisation is key to closing the inequitable gap in immunisation rate...
Timeliness of immunisation is important in achieving a protective effect at the individual and popul...
Background. Australian Indigenous children are the only population worldwide to receive the 7-valent...
Abstract Objective: To assess the level of underreporting to the Australian Childhood Immunisation R...
In Australia, we used the World Health Organization’s Tailoring Immunization Programmes to identify ...
Background - To evaluate immunisation coverage, timeliness and predictors of delayed receipt in urba...
Objectives: To obtain, through a survey, estimates of immunisation coverage in a birth cohort of ...
Aim The aim of this study is to examine the age-appropriate immunisation coverage and the factors as...
Abstract Objective: To estimate immunisation coverage for routinely administered vaccines among chil...
Abstract Background Improving timely immunisation is key to closing the inequitable gap in immunisat...
© 2018 Reported infant vaccination coverage at age 12 months in Australia is > 90%. On-time cove...
Full list of author information is available at the end of the articlebenchmark of program effective...
Background: Delayed immunisation and vaccine preventable communicable disease remains a significant ...
Introduction Immunisation coverage is a good measure of immunisation program effectiveness. Coverage...
Background: Immunisation timeliness continues to present challenges to achieving optimal vaccine cov...
Background: Improving timely immunisation is key to closing the inequitable gap in immunisation rate...
Timeliness of immunisation is important in achieving a protective effect at the individual and popul...
Background. Australian Indigenous children are the only population worldwide to receive the 7-valent...
Abstract Objective: To assess the level of underreporting to the Australian Childhood Immunisation R...
In Australia, we used the World Health Organization’s Tailoring Immunization Programmes to identify ...