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Measles Vaccination at Health System Contacts
Sponsor: Bandim Health Project
Summary
In addition to protecting against measles infection, measles vaccine (MV) strengthens the individual's ability to combat infections in general - MV has beneficial non-specific effects (NSE) lowering the risk of death and admissions by around 30%. In Guinea-Bissau 30% of children do not receive a routine MV scheduled at 9 months of age, putting both the individual child's health and measles eradication at risk. The coverage of a second dose of MV, which was added to the Bissau-Guinean vaccination programme in 2022, is even lower. WHO recommends vaccination at health system contacts, including those for curative services. At the paediatric ward of the national hospital in Guinea-Bissau, there are more than 2600 yearly contacts with measles-un or under-vaccinated children aged 9-59 months, but no vaccines are given. In a randomised controlled trial, we will assess the effect of providing MV vs placebo to 5400 children at hospital contacts (at discharge or after an out-patient consultation) to test the hypothesis that MV reduces the risk of admission or death (composite outcome) by 25% over the subsequent 6 months.
Official title: Health Effects of Utilising Curative Health System Contacts to Provide Measles Vaccination - a Randomised Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
9 Months - 59 Months
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
5400
Start Date
2020-01-08
Completion Date
2027-06
Last Updated
2025-07-29
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
measles vaccine
Measles vaccine, Edmonston-Zagreb strain, 0.5 ml administered as a subcutaneous injection
Saline
0.9% NaCl
Locations (1)
Bandim Health Project
Bissau, Guinea-Bissau