Shaping the future: Our strategy for research and innovation in humanitarian response.

A global organisation that finds solutions to complex humanitarian problems through research and innovation..
Our purpose is clear: we work in partnership with a global community of humanitarian actors, researchers and innovators to improve the quality of humanitarian action and deliver better outcomes for people affected by crises.
We empower the humanitarian community. Find out how we can support you...

Principal Investigators: Stefan Flasche, LSHTM & Francesco Checci, LSHTM

Research Snapshot: Effective pneumococcal vaccination campaigns in displaced populations

Generating evidence on optimal vaccination strategies to protect children in humanitarian settings against pneumococcal pneumonia.

View Snapshot

What did the study set out to achieve?

This study aimed to identify effective and cost-effective pneumococcal vaccination strategies for crisis affected populations. Specifically to:

  1. identify optimal mass pneumococcal vaccination strategies that reduce disease burden in displacement, rural and urban crisis scenarios;
  2. estimate the cost and cost-effectiveness of these strategies; and
  3. quantify the global theoretical pneumococcal vaccine need for humanitarian uses.

The project expected to produce recommendations on optimal pneumococcal vaccination strategies as well as:

  • A unique quantification of social mixing and nasopharyngeal carriage patterns in a displaced, overcrowded population, providing a basis for further work on disease control strategies in such populations, including for other pathogens;
  • A readily transferable, general model to estimate pneumococcal carriage, disease burden and the potential benefit of vaccination in other crisis settings, helping to tailor strategies and prioritisation decisions to specific contexts.

What were the key findings?

Based on data collected from 509 participants across 464 households (65% of inhabited unique shelters) and 454 swabs, the study found:

  • A high prevalence of risk factors for respiratory illness (e.g. crowded living conditions; 20% of children under five years of age were stunted)
  • A high disease burden: 46% of children with self-reported recent pneumonia, high crude death rates, and carriage rates similar to those of rural Kenya.
  • Vaccination of children under one year of age only has limited and short-lived effects.
  • Vaccination of children under five years of age at high coverage can
    • prevent about 30% of severe pneumococcal disease in the 2 years following the campaign
    • partially protect unvaccinated infants for 3-5 years after the campaign due to reduced transmission
  • Vaccination of under fives is also cost effective: it prevents a similar amount of disease per dose administered as routine use in infants in Kenya.
  • If migration rates are high or vaccine coverage is low, extending campaigns to older children can retain indirect protection.

What are the implications for practitioners and policymakers?

These findings imply that humanitarian actors should consider integrating pneumococcal conjugate vaccine campaigns for at least <5-yearold children into their routine humanitarian response portfolio.

This could be done through co-administration with measles containing vaccines and Vitamin A in the acute phase of a humanitarian crisis.

To have the most impact, a PCV campaign should target not only the children most at risk of severe disease (those under two) but also key transmitters (mainly older children aged two to 10). Campaigns limited to only children most at risk are less effective and less efficient in offering durable protection.

The study team are continuing to engage key stakeholders with these messages to influence the guidance for PCV vaccination in humanitarian settings.

Play video

Publications

Research Snapshot Communicable disease (including infectious disease outbreaks)

Research Snapshot: Effective pneumococcal vaccination campaigns in displaced populations

Article Communicable disease (including infectious disease outbreaks)

Pre-vaccination carriage prevalence of Streptococcus pneumoniae serotypes among internally displaced people in Somaliland

Peer Reviewed Communicable disease (including infectious disease outbreaks)

Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine use during humanitarian crises

Article Communicable disease (including infectious disease outbreaks)

Social contacts and other risk factors for respiratory infections among internally displaced people in Somaliland

Latest Updates

Pneumonia: Rethinking vaccine strategies to save lives

12 Nov 2024

This video showcases the key findings from the study to disseminate for World Pneumonia Day 2024. Available in English and French.

View
2024Nov

Uptake and Impact Small Grant Received

Jun 2023

The study team received a further small grant from R2HC to complete additional uptake activities until June 2024. Videos explaining this research on pneumococcal conjugate vaccination strategies will be developed for dissemination with NGOs and governmental organisations.

2023Jun

Presentation at MSF Scientific Days

7 Jun 2023

Kevin van Zandvoort discusses modelling the potential impact of pneumococcal vaccination strategies in humanitarian crises at the 2023 MSF Scientific Days.

View

Interview with Kevin: World Pneumonia Day 2022

12 Nov 2022

In this interview published to mark World Pneumonia Day, Kevin van Zandvoort discusses how rethinking pneumonia vaccination strategies can save lives.

View
2022Nov

Study receives Gates Foundation funding

Oct 2021

The research team has received funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to implement and evaluate the strategy identified as most effective by this R2HC funded study, to immunise internally displaced persons in humanitarian crisis settings.

View
2021Oct

World Pneumonia Day Campaign

12 Nov 2019

Kevin van Zandvoort participated in a televised campaign to raise local awareness for pneumonia and pneumococcal disease during world pneumonia day.

View
2019Nov

Logos

Subscribe to our newsletters....

Subscribe
 
Elrha © 2018 - 2025 Elrha is a registered charity in England and Wales (1177110). KEEP IN TOUCH Want to stay up to date with our latest updates? Sign up to our newsletters
Elrha
Elrha Please upgrade your browser

You are seeing this because you are using a browser that is not supported. The Elrha website is built using modern technology and standards. We recommend upgrading your browser with one of the following to properly view our website:

Windows Mac

Please note that this is not an exhaustive list of browsers. We also do not intend to recommend a particular manufacturer's browser over another's; only to suggest upgrading to a browser version that is compliant with current standards to give you the best and most secure browsing experience.