Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries

Abstract Background Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) maintained high childhood vaccination coverage for 17 years but faced setbacks, increasing vulnerability to vaccine-preventable diseases. Despite signs of recovery, geographic inequalities and social deprivations persist. This study provides...

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Main Authors: Fato Fene, Mira Johri, Manassé Eliantus Michel, Hortensia Reyes-Morales, Blanca Estela Pelcastre-Villafuerte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-06-01
Series:International Journal for Equity in Health
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-025-02561-9
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author Fato Fene
Mira Johri
Manassé Eliantus Michel
Hortensia Reyes-Morales
Blanca Estela Pelcastre-Villafuerte
author_facet Fato Fene
Mira Johri
Manassé Eliantus Michel
Hortensia Reyes-Morales
Blanca Estela Pelcastre-Villafuerte
author_sort Fato Fene
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) maintained high childhood vaccination coverage for 17 years but faced setbacks, increasing vulnerability to vaccine-preventable diseases. Despite signs of recovery, geographic inequalities and social deprivations persist. This study provides an up-to-date cross-sectional analysis of prevalence, subnational variation, and key determinants of suboptimal basic child vaccination (BCV). Methods We produced weighted estimates of suboptimal BCV prevalence at the national and subnational levels via harmonized data from household surveys spanning a 12-year period (2011–2022) in the LAC region. Six BCV-related outcomes were analysed: completely unvaccinated, no BCG, no DTP, no OPV, no MCV and not fully vaccinated. We employed a four-level mixed-effects logistic regression to analyse determinants of suboptimal BCV and to partition the total outcome variation over country, region, primary sample units (PSUs) and child‒mother‒household levels. Choropleth maps were used to illustrate the weighted mean prevalence of subnational regions for each outcome. Additionally, sensitivity analyses were performed to validate the findings and assess robustness. Findings A total of 18,136 children aged 12–23 months across 211 subnational regions in 15 LAC countries were analysed. The prevalence of suboptimal BCV ranged from 0.99% completely unvaccinated to 66% not fully vaccinated. Significant subnational disparities were observed: while all subnational regions in Cuba and Costa Rica had consistently low rates of completely unvaccinated children (< 3%), subnational regions or states such as Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo and Mahaica-Berbice (Guyana) reported much higher rates, reaching 30.23% (95% CI: 9.52–50.94) and 26.56% (95% CI: 11.39–41.73), respectively. Maternal deprivation increased the risk of suboptimal BCV. The prevalence of completely unvaccinated children was significantly greater among those whose mothers did not have institutional delivery (3.35%; 95% CI: 3.07–3.63) than among those whose mothers had institutional delivery (0.74%; 95% CI: 0.70–0.79). The likelihood of suboptimal BCV outcomes increased as health services and socioeconomic deprivation intensified and intersected. Conclusions In LACs, geographic inequalities and multiple deprivations increase the risk of suboptimal BCV. These countries should prioritize efforts to vaccinate children whose mothers lack access to one or more key health services, especially those from poor families.
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spelling doaj-art-420a0cb9a4a247b3aba025dc38c7c2bd2025-08-20T03:24:21ZengBMCInternational Journal for Equity in Health1475-92762025-06-0124111710.1186/s12939-025-02561-9Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countriesFato Fene0Mira Johri1Manassé Eliantus Michel2Hortensia Reyes-Morales3Blanca Estela Pelcastre-Villafuerte4Center for Health Systems Research, National Institute of Public HealthCarrefour de l’Innovation, Centre de Recherche du Centre Hospitalier de l’, Université de Montréal (CRCHUM)Senghor UniversityCenter for Health Systems Research, National Institute of Public HealthCenter for Health Systems Research, National Institute of Public HealthAbstract Background Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) maintained high childhood vaccination coverage for 17 years but faced setbacks, increasing vulnerability to vaccine-preventable diseases. Despite signs of recovery, geographic inequalities and social deprivations persist. This study provides an up-to-date cross-sectional analysis of prevalence, subnational variation, and key determinants of suboptimal basic child vaccination (BCV). Methods We produced weighted estimates of suboptimal BCV prevalence at the national and subnational levels via harmonized data from household surveys spanning a 12-year period (2011–2022) in the LAC region. Six BCV-related outcomes were analysed: completely unvaccinated, no BCG, no DTP, no OPV, no MCV and not fully vaccinated. We employed a four-level mixed-effects logistic regression to analyse determinants of suboptimal BCV and to partition the total outcome variation over country, region, primary sample units (PSUs) and child‒mother‒household levels. Choropleth maps were used to illustrate the weighted mean prevalence of subnational regions for each outcome. Additionally, sensitivity analyses were performed to validate the findings and assess robustness. Findings A total of 18,136 children aged 12–23 months across 211 subnational regions in 15 LAC countries were analysed. The prevalence of suboptimal BCV ranged from 0.99% completely unvaccinated to 66% not fully vaccinated. Significant subnational disparities were observed: while all subnational regions in Cuba and Costa Rica had consistently low rates of completely unvaccinated children (< 3%), subnational regions or states such as Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo and Mahaica-Berbice (Guyana) reported much higher rates, reaching 30.23% (95% CI: 9.52–50.94) and 26.56% (95% CI: 11.39–41.73), respectively. Maternal deprivation increased the risk of suboptimal BCV. The prevalence of completely unvaccinated children was significantly greater among those whose mothers did not have institutional delivery (3.35%; 95% CI: 3.07–3.63) than among those whose mothers had institutional delivery (0.74%; 95% CI: 0.70–0.79). The likelihood of suboptimal BCV outcomes increased as health services and socioeconomic deprivation intensified and intersected. Conclusions In LACs, geographic inequalities and multiple deprivations increase the risk of suboptimal BCV. These countries should prioritize efforts to vaccinate children whose mothers lack access to one or more key health services, especially those from poor families.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-025-02561-9Vaccination coverageMaternal healthMaternal‒Child health servicesSocial deprivationLatin AmericaCaribbean region.
spellingShingle Fato Fene
Mira Johri
Manassé Eliantus Michel
Hortensia Reyes-Morales
Blanca Estela Pelcastre-Villafuerte
Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
International Journal for Equity in Health
Vaccination coverage
Maternal health
Maternal‒Child health services
Social deprivation
Latin America
Caribbean region.
title Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
title_full Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
title_fullStr Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
title_full_unstemmed Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
title_short Multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: cross-sectional analysis of household survey data for 18,136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
title_sort multiple deprivations as drivers of suboptimal basic child vaccination in latin america and the caribbean cross sectional analysis of household survey data for 18 136 children across 211 regions in 15 countries
topic Vaccination coverage
Maternal health
Maternal‒Child health services
Social deprivation
Latin America
Caribbean region.
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-025-02561-9
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