Table 1.
Reasons for household non-response in the surveys conducted 1 month before (baseline), and 3 and 12 months after (first and second follow-up) an oral cholera vaccination campaign, Maela Camp, 2013.
Table 2.
Socio-demographic characteristics of respondent households in the surveys conducted 1 month before (baseline), and 3 and 12 months after (first and second follow-up) an oral cholera vaccination campaign, Maela Camp, 2013.
Table 3.
Knowledge and practices about safe water, sanitation and hygiene in surveys conducted 1 month before (baseline), and 3 and 12 months after (first and second follow-up) an oral cholera vaccination campaign, Maela Camp, 2013.
Fig 1.
Differences in knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAPs) for surveys conducted 1 month before (baseline) versus 3 and 12 months after (first and second follow-up) an oral cholera vaccination campaign in Maela Camp, 2013.
Absolute differences in proportions for KAP responses in the first and second follow-up surveys compared to baseline were calculated; error bars depict 95% Wald asymptotic confidence interval (CI). Statistically significant differences (CI not overlapping zero) are shown in grey; non-significant differences are shown in white. Outcomes marked with * have directionality of difference switched from Tables 3 and 4, so that improvements are depicted in positive direction, and negative changes are depicted in negative direction.
Table 4.
Knowledge, attitudes and practices about vaccination in surveys conducted 1 month before (baseline), and 3 and 12 months after (first and second follow-up) an oral cholera vaccination campaign, Maela Camp, 2013.
Table 5.
Oral cholera vaccination (OCV) acceptability 1 month before the campaign (baseline) and campaign awareness and OCV uptake 3 months after the campaign (first follow-up), Maela Camp, 2013.
Table 6.
Oral cholera vaccine (OCV) coverage by survey of household respondents’ recall and individual vaccination cards 3 months after an OCV campaign (first follow-up), Maela Camp, 2013.