Vaccination Coverage - Shielding the Masses
- Definition: Proportion of a defined population (e.g., infants, pregnant women) that has received a specific vaccine or all doses in a schedule.
- Goal: Achieve high & equitable coverage (typically >90% for Universal Immunization Programme vaccines) to interrupt disease transmission.
- Importance:
- Direct protection for vaccinated individuals.
- Indirect protection for the community via Herd Immunity.
- Occurs when a critical portion of a community is immunized against a contagious disease, protecting unimmunized individuals.
- Herd Immunity Threshold: $p_c = 1 - 1/R_0$ (where $R_0$ = Basic Reproduction Number).
- Example: Measles requires >90-95% coverage for effective herd immunity.

⭐ The minimum level of immunization coverage needed to achieve herd immunity varies by disease; for measles, it is one of the highest at >90-95% due to its high infectivity ($R_0$ of 12-18).
Assessment Methods - Counting the Shots
Primary method for field assessment:
- WHO 30x7 Cluster Sampling: Standard for rapid coverage estimation.
- Objective: Estimate coverage for individual vaccines (BCG, OPV, DPT, Measles, Hepatitis B) & full immunization status.
- Sample: 30 clusters (villages/wards) × 7 children per cluster = 210 children.
- Target Age: Typically 12-23 months (assesses timely completion of primary series).
- Cluster Selection: Probability Proportional to Size (PPS) from a complete sampling frame.
- Household Selection:
- Randomly select first household in a cluster.
- Proceed to nearest households until 7 eligible children are found.
- Data Sources: Vaccination cards (primary), mother's reliable recall (secondary).

⭐ The 30x7 cluster sampling method, widely used by WHO, typically provides coverage estimates with a precision of ±10% at a 95% confidence level for the entire sampled area.
Indicators & Interpretation - Reading the Report Card
| Indicator | Definition / Key Points | Formula / Target |
|---|---|---|
| Fully Immunized Child (FIC) | Child 12-23 months received BCG, OPV (3 doses), DPT/Penta (3 doses), Measles (1st dose). | Target: >90% (UIP). |
| Crude Coverage (Individual Vaccine) | Proportion of eligible children receiving a specific vaccine dose. Assesses reach. | $(No.\ of\ children\ receiving\ specific\ dose / Total\ eligible\ children) * 100## Indicators & Interpretation - Reading the Report Card |
| | Dropout Rate (DOR) | % children starting but not completing multi-dose series (e.g., DPT1 to DPT3). | $((Initial\ Dose\ - \ Final\ Dose) / Initial\ Dose) * 100## Indicators & Interpretation - Reading the Report Card
. Target: <10%. | | Invalid Doses | Doses given too early, too late, wrong interval/route. Reduces true protection. | Not counted in coverage. | | Missed Opportunities (MOV) | Eligible child visits health facility but doesn't receive needed vaccines. System issue. | Identify & reduce. |> ⭐ NFHS-5 (2019-21) reported 76.4% full immunization coverage (12-23 months) in India, highlighting the gap from the >90% UIP target.
Challenges & Solutions - Bridging the Gaps
- Challenges (Barriers):
- Operational: Vaccine logistics, cold chain, manpower shortage, AEFI monitoring.
- Community: Low awareness, misinformation, vaccine hesitancy, migration, cultural beliefs.
- Geographical: Hard-to-reach areas, difficult terrain.
- Solutions (Bridging Gaps):
- Strengthen Service Delivery: Outreach, mobile teams, Reaching Every District (RED).
- Boost Demand: IEC/BCC, community participation, address hesitancy.
- Improve M&E: Supportive supervision, data analysis, eVIN, U-WIN.
⭐ Mission Indradhanush (MI) & Intensified Mission Indradhanush (IMI) target unvaccinated/partially vaccinated children (<2 yrs) & pregnant women in high-priority areas.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- WHO's 30x7 Cluster Sampling is standard for rapid coverage assessment.
- Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS) classifies areas by vaccination performance.
- Coverage Evaluation Surveys (CES) give periodic national/state estimates.
- Accurate denominator (target children) & numerator (vaccinated) are crucial.
- Vaccination cards are primary proof; recall/history is secondary.
- Target >80% routine coverage; >90-95% for measles to achieve herd immunity.
- Reducing Missed Opportunities for Vaccination (MOV) is vital.
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