Vaccination Coverage
Cross-source consensus on Vaccination Coverage from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Comparisons
Background
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- By age 30 months, 38.9% of children were fully vaccinated, 52.4% incompletely vaccinated, and 8.8% unvaccinated. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile
- The highest coverage was seen for tetanus, diphtheria, Haemophilus influenzae type b, poliomyelitis, and pertussis, reaching up to 89.0% among children born in 2018. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile
- After standardised national vaccination codes were introduced in 2008, coverage was about 80% for many vaccines. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile
- Vaccination coverage varied substantially among German federal states. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile
- Lower apparent vaccination coverage before 2008 is attributed more to incomplete coding than to necessarily lower uptake. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile
- New vaccine recommendations temporarily lowered the proportion classified as completely vaccinated. — German Million Children Cohort: a historical birth cohort based on claims data to investigate the impact of immunisation and other early life factors on the risk of cancer and other diseases in childhood – cohort profile