Publikasi Scopus 926 artikel (Per 14 Maret 2022)

Kalaij A.G.I., Sugiyanto M., Ilham A.F.
57223906853;57223907058;57223916865;
Factors Associated With Vaccination Compliance in Southeast Asian Children: A Systematic Review
2021
Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health
33
5
479
488
1
Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia
Kalaij, A.G.I., Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Sugiyanto, M., Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Ilham, A.F., Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia
Although vaccination coverage has reached a peak of 86% globally, around 19.9 million infants and children are yet to receive routine vaccinations—with Asia holding the highest prevalence of noncompliance. This implies notable gaps in vaccination coverage among some regions in the world. This study aims to analyze the factors associated with compliance toward childhood vaccination in Southeast Asia. A systematic review of observational studies was conducted using the following databases: PubMed, Scopus, and Cochrane. Included studies analyze factors affecting compliance with childhood vaccination in Southeast Asia, and assessed with Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) and Newcastle-Ottawa Scale’s criteria. Sixteen observational studies were included, with a total of 41 956 subjects, consisting of 15 cross-sectional studies and one case-control study. Our results suggested that parental personal–related, children and family status–related, socioeconomic, and health care–related factors strongly affected subjects’ compliance with immunization. Prominent determinants were older maternal age, higher economics groups, parents in government or health care sectors, and frequent antenatal care visits. On the other hand, noncompliance were associated with younger age, large quantity of family members, lower economic groups, lower education, and unemployed parents. We hope that this comprehensive assessment thoroughly addresses challenges and inform strategies to raise compliance toward childhood vaccination in Southeast Asia. © 2021 APJPH.
childhood vaccination; compliance; factors; Southeast Asia
case control study; child; childhood; controlled study; cross-sectional study; education; educational status; female; government; health care cost; human; human experiment; infant; male; maternal age; Medline; Newcastle-Ottawa scale; observational study; prenatal care; review; Scopus; Southeast Asia; Southeast Asian; systematic review; unemployment; vaccination; article
SAGE Publications Inc.
10105395
34013786
Review
Q2
572
8837