Gaps in maternal influenza vaccine uptake in Northern Territory: A need for a year-round influenza vaccination campaign

Authors

  • Priya Darshene Janagaraj Public Health Registrar, NT Centre for Disease Control (CDC), Northern Territory Australia
  • Pari Shanmuga Raman Gurusamy Obstetrics and Gynaecology Registrar, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Top End Health Services, Northern Territory Australia
  • Rosalind Webby Head of Immunisation, NT Centre for Disease Control (CDC), Northern Territory Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2019.43.49

Keywords:

Maternal, pregnancy, influenza, Aboriginal, vaccination, Northern Territory, uptake, gaps

Abstract

Introduction

Maternal influenza vaccination was introduced in 2010 due to the high morbidity and mortality associated with influenza in pregnancy. The aim of this study was to assess the maternal influenza vaccination uptake in Northern Territory public hospitals and identify gaps to improve uptake.

Methods

Birth data from Northern Territory (NT) public hospitals obtained from the Perinatal Register for deliveries in 2016 were merged with vaccination records from the NT immunisation register.

Results

There were 3,392 viable pregnancies in NT public hospitals in 2016 with 45.6% vaccination coverage against influenza. There was a statistically significant difference in coverage with 68.5% in Indigenous vs 31.7% in non-Indigenous deliveries (p<0.001), yielding an odds ratio of 4.67 (95% CI 4.02, 5.42) for maternal influenza vaccination across Indigenous status. Influenza vaccination coverage for preterm births (<37 weeks) was low especially in non–Indigenous mothers at 27.2% vs 65.05% in Indigenous mothers (p<0.001). A distinct immunisation administration pattern was noted for 2016 with 58.9% of vaccinations occurring between April and June regardless of Indigenous status and maternal gestational age. This correlated with the annual influenza immunisation campaign by the NT and Commonwealth.

Conclusion

A year-round maternal influenza vaccination campaign is crucial to avoid missed opportunities and increase vaccination protection for mother and baby. Antenatal influenza vaccination campaign with health care workers education and increasing patient awareness should continue throughout the year.

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Published

29/06/23

How to Cite

Darshene Janagaraj , Priya, Pari Shanmuga Raman Gurusamy, and Rosalind Webby. 2023. “Gaps in Maternal Influenza Vaccine Uptake in Northern Territory: A Need for a Year-Round Influenza Vaccination Campaign ”. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 43 (June). https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2019.43.49.

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