Closing the Immunization Gap: Complete basic childhood vaccination and associated factors among children aged 12–23 months in Tanzania; a multilevel analysis
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Background
Globally, vaccination prevents an estimated 4 to 5 million deaths annually, including hundreds of thousands of deaths among children under five. Despite significant global progress in childhood immunization, complete vaccination coverage remains low in Sub-Saharan Africa, including Tanzania. Therefore, we aimed to examine the coverage of complete basic childhood vaccinations and associated factors among children aged 12–23 months in Tanzania.
Methods
Analytical cross-sectional study of the 2022 Tanzania Demographic and Health Surveys data was conducted. The sampling frame was stratified by geographic region and urban/rural areas, using a two-stage sampling method that selected primary sampling units based on census enumeration areas, followed by household selection using probability systematic sampling. Multilevel logistic regression, accounting for the complex survey design, was used to identify individual and community-level factors associated with complete childhood vaccination. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% Confidence intervals (CI) were used to estimate the strength of association.
Results
The prevalence of complete basic childhood vaccination was 52.5% (95%CI: 49.6 - 55.3). Among these children, coverage for individual vaccines was high, with 86.5% receiving the first dose of measles and 91.0% receiving BCG. However, the percentage receiving the full dose was lower for polio (58.9%) and 90.0% for DPT. Mothers with primary, secondary/higher education, in middle wealth quintile, had more than four ANC visits, had 1-2 under-five children were more likely to completely vaccinate their children. At the community level, mothers in western, central zones and Zanzibar were more likely to vaccinate their children.
Conclusion
Complete basic childhood vaccination coverage in Tanzania was suboptimal and associated with various factors including maternal education, middle wealth, more ANC visits, and fewer young children exhibited higher vaccination odds. Western, central zones, and Zanzibar showed higher coverage. Targeted interventions addressing education, wealth, ANC, family size, and regional disparities would be crucial to improve vaccination rates in Tanzania.