“… [33] , [38] , [39] , [44] , [46] , [48] , [51] , [52] , [59] | Ethnicity | 3 | Hausa / Fulani ethnic groups (often nomadic or semi-nomadic pastoralists) were less likely to be vaccinated compared to Igbo or Yoruba ethnic groups | [59] , [87] , [88] , [89] |
Conflict and displacement | | | |
Insurgency and conflict | 7 | Insurgency and conflict caused internal displacement and prevented access to settlements by vaccination and / or surveillance teams, particularly in Northern Nigeria, resulting in lower vaccination rates. | [90] , [91] , [92] , [93] , [94] , [95] , [96] |
Displacement / migration | 3 | Rural-to-urban migrants, displaced persons, and recent migrants were less likely to be vaccinated e.g., due to disruption of return visits and challenges to follow-up missed children. | [45] , [78] , [97] |
Health system factors |
Access to vaccination |
Access to health facilities | 17 | Long travel times, difficult terrain, poor or non-existent roads, and perception of the facility being ‘far’ were associated with no or incomplete vaccination, particularly for rural and low-income populations. |
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