KUMJ | VOL. 23 | NO. 4 | ISSUE 92 | OCTOBER-DECEMBER
Using Inactivated Polio Vaccine Vaccination Campaign Coverage Insights to Strengthen Nepal’s Immunization Programme
Chawla B, Lal BK, Pradhan R, Upadhyaya P, Rathaur ES, Gautam A, Shrestha DM, Shakya SK, Kumar V
Abstract: Background
Nepal’s National Immunization Programme (NIP) has made significant strides in
safeguarding public health, notably through the integration of the Inactivated
Polio Vaccine (IPV) in national immunization schedule, in 2014, to combat wild
poliovirus serotypes. However, a global IPV shortage between 2016 and 2018 left
approximately 1.46 million children unvaccinated, creating an immunity gap against
Type-2 poliovirus.
Objective
To evaluate the coverage and equity of Nepal’s national inactivated polio vaccine
catch-up campaign (May 26 to June 8, 2024) and identify key areas needing
improvement.
Method
Administrative data from all 77 districts were reviewed and analysed by province,
district, and ecological zone. To address this, Nepal launched a nationwide IPV
vaccination campaign from May 26 to June 8, 2024, targeting children aged between
five years and eight months to eight years and months.
Result
The campaign achieved national coverage of 95.9%. However, disparities were noted:
district-level coverage ranged from 45.2% in Bagmati to 124.7% in Koshi. Provincelevel
performance varied, with Madhesh (111.6%) and Karnali (110.7%) exceeding
targets, while Bagmati (88.2%) and Gandaki (75.8%) underperformed. These
differences were influenced by terrain, cold chain capacity, population mobility, and
urban-rural inequities.
Conclusion
Nepal’s inactivated polio vaccine campaign largely succeeded in bridging the postshortage
immunity gap, but subnational disparities highlight systemic challenges.
Strengthening cold chain infrastructure, improving microplanning through quality
data, and tailoring outreach to underserved areas are essential to enhance equity
and sustain Nepal’s polio-free status.
Keyword : Healthcare disparities, Immunization, Immunization programs, Inactivated poliovirus vaccine, Nepal, Vaccination coverage