SummaryBackgroundChildhood immunisation services have been disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. WHO recommends considering outbreak risk using epidemiological criteria when deciding whether to conduct preventive vaccination campaigns during the pandemic.MethodsWe used 2-3 models per infection to estimate the health impact of 50% reduced routine vaccination coverage in 2020 and delay of campaign vaccination from 2020 to 2021 for measles vaccination in Bangladesh, Chad, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and South Sudan, for meningococcal A vaccination in Burkina Faso, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria, and for yellow fever vaccination in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, and Nigeria. Our counterfactual comparative scenario was sustaining immunisation services at coverage projections made prior to COVID-19 (i.e. without any disruption).FindingsReduced routine vaccination coverage in 2020 without catch-up vaccination may lead to an increase in measles and yellow fever disease burden in the modelled countries. Delaying planned campaigns in Ethiopia and Nigeria by a year may significantly increased the risk of measles outbreaks (both countries did complete their SIAS planned for 2020). For yellow fever vaccination, delay in campaigns leads to a potential disease burden rise of >1 death per 100,000 people until the campaigns are implemented. For meningococcal A vaccination, short term disruptions in 2020 are unlikely to have a significant impact due to the persistence of direct and indirect benefits from past introductory campaigns of the 1 to 29-year-old population, bolstered by inclusion of the vaccine into the routine immunisation schedule accompanied by further catch-up campaigns.InterpretationThe impact of COVID-19-related disruption to vaccination programs varies between infections and countries. Planning and implementation of campaigns should consider country and infection-specific epidemiological factors and local immunity gaps worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic when prioritising vaccines and strategies for catch-up vaccination.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Gavi, the Vaccine AllianceResearch in contextEvidence before the studyWe searched PubMed for (COVID-19 OR coronavirus OR SARS-CoV-2) AND (child health intervention OR vaccin* or immuni*) AND (disruption OR suspension OR reduction) AND (indirect effect OR health impact) on January 14, 2021, with no language restrictions. We found 178 articles of which 13 articles were relevant. Six articles reported some empirical data on immunization disruption in Bangladesh, Japan, Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain and Italy, and a survey study focussed on immunization disruption in low and middle-income countries. One article proposed using the WHO health systems framework to assess the effects of COVID-19 on immunisation programmes in South Africa, another study on leveraging systems thinking and implementation science to improve immunization system performance in Africa, and two studies were review articles. One modelling study focused on the indirect effects, including reduction in routine immunisation services, of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and child mortality in low-income and middle-income countries. Another modelling study focused on a benefit-risk analysis of routine childhood immunisation during the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa. We also found one other study in the grey literature that analysed the impact on SARS-CoV-2 infections as a result of fixed-post and door-to-door vaccination campaigns targeted at children under five years of age in an Ethiopia-like setting.Added value of this studyWe estimated the increase in cases and deaths caused by the disruption to immunisation services leading to outbreaks for measles, meningococcal A and yellow fever in 10 countries. The reduction in routine immunisation coverage among under-immunised cohorts of children has enhanced the risk of outbreaks which cannot be averted without catch-up vaccination. This can lead to an increase of 9.89% (0.91 additional deaths per 100,000 individuals, or 48,000 in total) across the three diseases from 2020 to 2030 in the countries considered. Results vary by infection and country, but generally most excess deaths are due to measles. Postponing campaign immunisation may not have a detrimental short-term health impact if campaign immunisation is implemented ahead of future outbreaks caused by these immunity gaps.Implications of the available evidenceThe COVID-19 pandemic has caused significant disruptions to routine services and vaccination campaigns and resulted in immunity gaps with potential to cause outbreaks in the affected populations. The short-term and long-term health impact differ between measles, meningococcal A and yellow fever vaccination and by countries based on the local epidemiological situation. Thereby, catch-up vaccination should be planned by considering the heterogeneity in population susceptibility across different countries to measles, meningococcal A and yellow fever outbreaks and implemented in time to prevent these outbreaks. The study findings can inform risk-benefit trade-off discussions around the timing of campaigns.