This document discusses immunization safety surveillance. It outlines strategies for ensuring vaccine quality and safety, including monitoring adverse events following immunization (AEFIs). An effective surveillance system involves peripheral health workers, supervisors, investigators, assessors, and safety committees. It also describes developing a surveillance system, reporting and investigating AEFIs, analyzing data, assessing causality, responding to events, and auditing corrective actions. The goal is to understand vaccine reactions and ensure best use of surveillance data to improve immunization programs and safety.
This document discusses immunization safety surveillance. It outlines strategies for ensuring vaccine quality and safety, including monitoring adverse events following immunization (AEFIs). An effective surveillance system involves peripheral health workers, supervisors, investigators, assessors, and safety committees. It also describes developing a surveillance system, reporting and investigating AEFIs, analyzing data, assessing causality, responding to events, and auditing corrective actions. The goal is to understand vaccine reactions and ensure best use of surveillance data to improve immunization programs and safety.
This document discusses immunization safety surveillance. It outlines strategies for ensuring vaccine quality and safety, including monitoring adverse events following immunization (AEFIs). An effective surveillance system involves peripheral health workers, supervisors, investigators, assessors, and safety committees. It also describes developing a surveillance system, reporting and investigating AEFIs, analyzing data, assessing causality, responding to events, and auditing corrective actions. The goal is to understand vaccine reactions and ensure best use of surveillance data to improve immunization programs and safety.
This document discusses immunization safety surveillance. It outlines strategies for ensuring vaccine quality and safety, including monitoring adverse events following immunization (AEFIs). An effective surveillance system involves peripheral health workers, supervisors, investigators, assessors, and safety committees. It also describes developing a surveillance system, reporting and investigating AEFIs, analyzing data, assessing causality, responding to events, and auditing corrective actions. The goal is to understand vaccine reactions and ensure best use of surveillance data to improve immunization programs and safety.
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IMMUNIzATION SAFETY SURVEILLANCE
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose Institute of Pharmacy
URMISTHA SARKAR M.PHARM 1ST YEAR strategies and systems for ensuring quality and safety of vaccines, new classification of AEFIs and the objectives of immunization safety/AEFIs surveillance, understanding vaccine reactions for better decision- making, AEFI surveillance system: reporting, investigating, causality assessment and responding processes, best use of surveillance data, and communication strategy on immunization safety for the public and the media. Immunity is described as the body’s protective ability against disease. There are two basic mechanisms for acquiring immunity: active and passive. Active immunity can be either natural, following an infection, and can last a lifetime, or through vaccination, which also lasts for a long period. Passive immunity also can be either natural or artificial; both last relatively for a short period. Vaccine is a biological product that improves immunity to a given disease and is divided into four types: live-attenuated, inactivated whole cell (killed), subunit and toxoid. Excipients (adjuvant, preservatives and other additives) contained in vaccines can cause occasional reactions. Knowledge of them is important in immunization safety surveillance. Vaccine reaction: event caused or precipitated by the vaccine when given correctly, caused by the inherent properties of the vaccine. Programme error: event caused by an error in vaccine preparation, handling, or administration. Coincidental: event that happens after immunization but not caused by the vaccine - a chance association. Injection reaction: event from anxiety about, or pain from, the injection itself rather than the vaccine Unknown: event’s cause cannot be determined. Effective immunization safety surveillance needs to involve the following people: peripheral health workers district level supervisor province level AEFI investigator regional/national assessor regional/national Immunization Safety Committee
Roles and responsibility of the NRA should include:
licensing vaccines according to published requirements evaluating clinical performance of the vaccine controlling and releasing each batch or lot of vaccine individually, including recall if Necessary performing laboratory testing vaccine performance (including safety) inspecting manufacturing facilities and processes regularly. Steps for developing an immunization safety surveillance system: 1. Clarify respective roles of the national regulatory authority and EPI, and agree on the objectives for the system. 2. Identify the resources available and needed and establish political commitment to immunization safety surveillance. 3. Appoint or designate regional/national assessors for immunization safety. 4. Establish an expert regional/national Immunization Safety Committee. 5. Develop and disseminate a list of events to be reported and their case definitions; a standard investigation procedure; and AEFI report and investigation forms. 6. Designate and train staff to prepare reports (peripheral health worker), complete report forms (district level) and investigate AEFI (province level). 7. Inform all health workers/clinicians of the need to report an AEFI immediately, and clarify which ones should be reported. 8. Consider establishment of a compensation scheme for specified AEFIs. Availability of a list of AEFIs to be reported is necessary. Case definition (e.g. by Brighton Collaboration) for each reportable event should be made available. AEFI reporting should be made on standardized reporting form using a minimal set of core variables to enable global evaluation of signals that will benefit countries in their evaluation of AEFI. Private sector reporting is encouraged. Sharing reports with the Western Pacific Region and globally (WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring /UMC) is encouraged. Identifying barriers to report and taking appropriate action will improve the reporting process. Investigation should be timely, comprehensive and methodical. Laboratory investigation(s) is (are) important, but should not be routine. To be conducted if only indicated and necessary. Autopsy investigations are encouraged. Data analysis is important to identify problems, generate hypothesis and decision-making. Interpretation of data needs to be cautious: compare rates, but not absolute numbers, and give attention to case definitions and used denominators. WHO information sheets on vaccine reaction rates provide rates of reactions of specific vaccines that can be helpful when comparing rates. Comparing background data with observed data does not conclude the causality. It only generates the hypothesis. To conclude that a vaccine causes a vaccine reaction, it is necessary to demonstrate that the risk in vaccinated individuals is greater than that in the non vaccinated. Causality assessment is the systematic review of individual or population data about an AEFI case to determine the likelihood of a causal association between the event and the vaccine/s received. The quality of the causality assessment depends on factors such as the effectiveness of the reporting system and the quality of the causality review process. Whether an AEFI is attributable or not to the vaccine or the vaccination programme, causality assessment determines what steps need to be taken to address the event. The response and follow-up for the AEFI will depend on the findings of the investigation. It is worth disseminating the results of the investigation so that others can learn from the experience. The investigation can also make a useful teaching resource in training investigators in the future. Immunization errors will need to be corrected. There should be a checking mechanism to ensure that they do not re-appear. For coincidental events, the main task is communication to avoid false attribution of blame. Timeliness, completeness and accuracy of AEFI reporting: monitoring information from reports and site visits; comparing reports with the facility patient register; and talking to health workers and observing their work. (Please refer to Training for Mid-Level Managers: Disease Surveillance WHO/IVB/08.08) Timeliness, completeness of investigations: checking reports to ensure that those meeting the investigation criteria were investigated; checking that investigation began within the defined time criteria; and confirming the adequacy of the investigation and soundness of the conclusion reached and corrective action recommended. Audit of corrective action: review by regional/national assessor to check that corrective action recommended has been checked, and adequacy of change in practice to prevent future programme error (programmatic errors).