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Missed opportunities for immunisation at hospitals in the western Cape - a reappraisal


C.A. Metcalf
D Yach
Z.J. de Beer

Abstract

Immunisation practices were examined at 6 hospitals in the western Cape during the latter half of 1992 to determine whether these practices had improved subsequent to the February 1991 resolution of the Health Matters Committee (HMC) on immunisation in hospitals, and since a similar study was undertaken in 1990. Exit interviews were conducted with the escorts of all children aged 3 - 59 months who attended the study hospitals on the days designated for the study.

In the second study, 88 of the 311 children studied (28,3%) were in need of immunisation on arrival, but only 12 of the 88 (13,6%) were immunised during the hospital visit. There was no evidence of an increase in requests to see children's Road-to-Health cards (37,1% compared with 35,2% previously). The  incidence of missed opportunities for measles immunisation in children aged 6 - 59 months remained unacceptably high (51,4% compared with 63,7% previously, when a strict definition was used; and 15,7% compared with 18,1% previously, when a lenient definition was used).

Health authorities at all levels need to take urgent action to address the problem of missed opportunities for immunisation at hospitals.


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eISSN: 2078-5135
print ISSN: 0256-9574