Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

< Back to Article

Table 1.

Descriptive characteristics comparing children with and without a vaccine card (% unless otherwise noted).

More »

Table 1 Expand

Table 2.

Child, maternal, and household characteristics associated with a child having a vaccine card.

More »

Table 2 Expand

Table 3.

Descriptive characteristics comparing children with and without coverage for MMR at the time of the survey (% unless otherwise noted).

More »

Table 3 Expand

Table 4.

Child, maternal, and household characteristics associated with a child being covered for MMR.

More »

Table 4 Expand

Table 5.

Coverage cascade of MMR by country.

More »

Table 5 Expand

Table 6.

Descriptive characteristics comparing children with and without missed opportunities for MMR vaccine (% unless otherwise noted).

More »

Table 6 Expand

Table 7.

Child, maternal, and household characteristics associated with a child having a missed opportunity for MMR vaccine.

More »

Table 7 Expand

Fig 1.

Days to MMR vaccination: observed time to vaccination and potential time to vaccination given missed opportunities by country and pooled*.

*Adjusted Kaplan-Meier estimation of the time to MMR vaccination among children with a vaccination card. Covariates are adjusted to the median value across the entire sample; results represent female children age 2 years whose mothers have primary education and are literate, are age 20–34 years with 2–3 children, are homemakers, and are living in a household in the third household expenditure quintile with 23.8% of assets, a male head of household, a household size of five, in a rural area. Vertical red lines indicate the time window in which MMR was considered on time (11.5–13.5 months of age). Labeled days of observation represent the following time points: 0 days = first day that a child is eligible for MMR vaccination (11.5 months of age); 60 days = end of MMR eligibility window (13.5 months); 380 days = age 2 years; 745 days = age 3 years; 1110 days = age 4 years; 1475 days = age 5 years, the oldest age at which a child was included in the sample.

More »

Fig 1 Expand

Table 8.

Cox proportional hazard model for MMR coverage.

More »

Table 8 Expand

Table 9.

Estimates of MMR coverage among children attending health facilities based on MMR stock and ORS stock*.

More »

Table 9 Expand