Authors
Ladan Hashemi, Maryam Ghasemi, Allen Bartley, John Fenaughty, Maryam Pirouzi, Cameron Grant
Publication date
2024/4/2
Journal
Vaccine
Volume
42
Issue
9
Pages
2229-2238
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
Migration has been recognized as an important determinant of child health outcomes including childhood vaccination status. This paper aims to examine the association between parental migration status and a less studied aspect of child immunization outcomes, namely timeliness, within the context of New Zealand (NZ), a country characterized by a substantial proportion of its resident population born overseas. Additionally, the study explored the impact of residential duration on children’s immunization timeliness.
Methods
The data was taken from a large, representative population-based cohort study in NZ (Growing Up in NZ study). A total of 6156 children and their parents, comprising 2241 foreign-born and 3915 NZ-born mothers and a sub-group of their partners were included in the analysis. The survey data was linked with the National Immunization Register dataset. Timely immunization was …