Vaccinations in the Third World: a consideration of community demand.

Impressive increases in immunization rates have been reported in several less developed countries (LDCs) as a result of intensive EPI programs. An issue arises as to whether existing rates of immunization coverage can be sustained/increased given projected cutbacks in funding. This issue calls into question the assumption that as immunizable disease rates fall, local populations will need less encouragement to secure immunization services. This article considers how immunizations are perceived by lay populations and how perceptions of utility and need effect demand which in turn effects the sustainability of EPI programs. Among issues addressed is the observation that when specific diseases are not linked to specific immunizations, misimpressions related to the number of immunizations needed for "good health" abound. Also considered are metamedical reasons immunizations (and immunization programs) are both resisted and demanded in particular political contexts.

[1]  F. Smedts,et al.  Tuberculosis cutis miliaris disseminata as a manifestation of miliary tuberculosis: literature review and report of a case of recurrent skin lesions. , 1991, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[2]  D. Sperber,et al.  Anthropology and Psychology: Towards an Epidemiology of Representations , 1985 .

[3]  Pierre Bourdieu,et al.  Outline of a Theory of Practice , 2020, On Violence.

[4]  M. L. Tan Traditional or transitional medical systems? Pharmacotherapy as a case for analysis. , 1989, Social science & medicine.

[5]  M. Marriott,et al.  Toward an Ethnosociology of South Asian Caste Systems , 1977 .

[6]  F. Cutts,et al.  Evaluation of factors influencing vaccine uptake in Mozambique. , 1989, International journal of epidemiology.

[7]  P. Rosenfield,et al.  Medical technologies in developing countries: issues of technology development, transfer, diffusion and use. , 1989, Social science & medicine.

[8]  M. Nichter Use of social science research to improve epidemiologic studies of and interventions for diarrhea and dysentery. , 1991, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[9]  N. Scheper‐Hughes,et al.  The Mindful Body: A Prolegomenon to Future Work in Medical Anthropology , 1987 .

[10]  Interpreting Indian Society: A Monistic Alternative to Dumont's Dualism , 1976 .

[11]  V. Kutty Women's education and its influence on attitudes to aspects of child-care in a village community in Kerala. , 1989, Social science & medicine.

[12]  Lincoln C. Chen PRIMARY HEALTH CARE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: OVERCOMING OPERATIONAL, TECHNICAL, AND SOCIAL BARRIERS , 1986, The Lancet.

[13]  Fenton Jc,et al.  TREATMENT OF HEPATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY BY ALTERATION OF INTESTINAL FLORA WITH LACTOBACILLUS ACIDOPHILUS. , 1965 .

[14]  G. P. Talwar,et al.  Anti-fertility vaccines. , 1989, Vaccine.

[15]  J. Coreil,et al.  Anthropology and Primary Health Care , 1990 .

[16]  B. D. Paul Health, Culture, and Community , 1956 .

[17]  M. Nichter Anthropology and International Health: Asian Case Studies , 1989 .

[18]  P. Aaby,et al.  Vaccinated children get milder measles infection: a community study from Guinea-Bissau. , 1986, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[19]  J. Comaroff,et al.  Ethnography and the Historical Imagination , 1993, Ethnography and the Historical Imagination.

[20]  D. Banerji Crash of the Immunization Program: Consequences of a Totalitarian Approach , 1990, International Journal of Health Services.

[21]  S. Rifkin,et al.  Why health improves: defining the issues concerning 'comprehensive primary health care' and 'selective primary health care'. , 1986, Social science & medicine.

[22]  M. Sodemann,et al.  Child mortality related to seroconversion or lack of seroconversion after measles vaccination. , 1989, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[23]  Tade Akin Aina,et al.  Blaming Others: Prejudice, Race And Worldwide AIDS , 1988 .

[24]  The Baby-Parts Story : A New Latin American Legend , 1990 .

[25]  T. S. Jones,et al.  Estimating health service utilization, immunization coverage, and childhood mortality: a new approach in Uganda. , 1987, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[26]  N. Schwartz Anthropological Views of Community and Community Development , 1981 .

[27]  P. Aaby Determinants of Measles Mortality: Host or Transmission Factors? , 1991 .

[28]  D. Haraway Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature , 1990 .

[29]  A. Odebiyi,et al.  Mothers' concept of measles and attitudes towards the measles vaccine in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. , 1982, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[30]  N. Etkin,et al.  The indigenization of pharmaceuticals: therapeutic transitions in rural Hausaland. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[31]  S. McCombie The cultural impact of the 'AIDS' test: the American experience. , 1986, Social science & medicine.

[32]  A. Augustin,et al.  Use of ethnographic research for instrument development in a case-control study of immunization use in Haiti. , 1989, International journal of epidemiology.

[33]  M. Singarimbun,et al.  Social factors affecting use of immunization in Indonesia. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[34]  M. Nichter,et al.  Acute respiratory illness: popular health culture and mother's knowledge in the Philippines. , 1993, Medical anthropology.

[35]  J. Rappaport,et al.  In praise of paradox: A social policy of empowerment over prevention , 1981, American journal of community psychology.

[36]  H. Wyatt Mothers, injections and poliomyelitis , 1992 .

[37]  M. Nichter The primary health center as a social system: PHC, social status, and the issue of team-work in South Asia. , 1986, Social science & medicine.

[38]  J. W. Anderson,et al.  Cow dung, rock salt, and medical innovation in the Hindu Kush of Pakistan: the cultural transformation of neonatal tetanus and iodine deficiency. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[39]  W. James Immunization: The Reality Behind the Myth , 1988 .

[40]  Lopez Ad,et al.  Health policy social policy and mortality prospects , 1985 .

[41]  K S Warren,et al.  Selective primary health care: an interim strategy for disease control in developing countries. , 1979, The New England journal of medicine.

[42]  N. Andersson,et al.  Who pays for measles? The economic arguments for sustained immunization , 1992 .

[43]  N. Halsey,et al.  Childhood survival in Haiti: protective effect of measles vaccination. , 1990, Pediatrics.

[44]  P. Aaby,et al.  Pattern of exposure and measles mortality in Senegal. , 1990, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[45]  J. Cohen Bumps on the vaccine road. , 1994, Science.

[46]  P. Byass,et al.  Factors influencing vaccination compliance in peri-urban Gambian children. , 1988, The Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[47]  K. David The New Wind: Changing Identities in South Asia , 1977 .

[48]  P. Wright,et al.  Progress in worldwide control and elimination of disease through immunization. , 1989, The Journal of pediatrics.

[49]  S. Halstead,et al.  Good health at low cost. , 1985 .

[50]  M. Nichter Social Science Lessons from Diarrhea Research and Their Application to ARI , 1993 .

[51]  B. Turner,et al.  Medical power and social knowledge , 1987 .

[52]  B. Jules‐Rosette The Veil of Objectivity: Prophecy, Divination, and Social Inquiry , 1978 .

[53]  C. Waternaux,et al.  An epidemiological assessment of immunization programme participation in the Philippines. , 1985, International journal of epidemiology.