Vaccine success and challenges in northern Australia. (Special Issue: Infectious diseases in northern Australia.)
Microbiology Australia
; 43(3):113-116, 2022.
Article
Dans Anglais
| CAB Abstracts | ID: covidwho-2272101
ABSTRACT
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in rural and remote Australia have lower vaccine coverage rates and experience higher rates of notification and hospitalisations for vaccine preventable diseases than non-Aboriginal people. This paper explores important public health and research activities being undertaken in the Northern Territory to reduce this disparity in vaccine program performance, with a particular focus on rotavirus, meningococcal, human papilloma virus and COVID-19 vaccines.
Host Resistance and Immunity [HH600], Social Psychology and Social Anthropology [UU485], Health Services [UU350], Prion; Viral; Bacterial and Fungal Pathogens of Humans [VV210], vaccines, vaccination, immunization, health protection, disease prevention, ethnicity, ethnic groups, coronavirus disease 2019, viral diseases, pandemics, public health, human papillomaviruses, meningococcal disease, bacterial diseases, immunization programmes, hospital admission, epidemiology, health care, risk reduction, health inequalities, human diseases, immune sensitization, Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, Rotavirus, Neisseria meningitidis, man, Papillomaviridae, Australia, APEC countries, Australasia, Oceania, Commonwealth of Nations, high income countries, OECD Countries, very high Human Development Index countries, Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirinae, Coronaviridae, Nidovirales, positive-sense ssRNA Viruses, ssRNA Viruses, RNA Viruses, viruses, Sedoreovirinae, Reoviridae, dsRNA Viruses, Neisseria, Neisseriaceae, Neisseriales, Betaproteobacteria, Proteobacteria, Bacteria, prokaryotes, Homo, Hominidae, primates, mammals, vertebrates, Chordata, animals, eukaryotes, dsDNA Viruses, DNA Viruses, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, indigenous peoples, ethnic differences, SARS-CoV-2, viral infections, Meningococcus, bacterial infections, bacterioses, bacterium, immunization programs, health disparities
Texte intégral:
Disponible
Collection:
Bases de données des oragnisations internationales
Base de données:
CAB Abstracts
Les sujets:
Vaccins
langue:
Anglais
Revue:
Microbiology Australia
Année:
2022
Type de document:
Article
Documents relatifs à ce sujet
MEDLINE
...
LILACS
LIS