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☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Enhancing the use of economic evidence in vaccination policy and decision making in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review of existing strategies

Por: Okeke · C. C. · Eze · O. · Ekwueme · C. N. · Ezechukwu · O. · Mbachu · C. O. · Uzochukwu · B. · Onwujekwe · O. — Diciembre 29th 2025 at 04:52
Objectives

The use of economic evidence to prioritise vaccines and delivery strategies to optimally use in immunisation systems is becoming a global priority, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), in view of challenges in funding and the need to make more efficient use of available resources. We undertook a scoping review to identify and synthesise available evidence on strategies that have been used to enhance the use of economic evidence in policy and decision-making in the immunisation ecosystem in LMICs. The review was also used to identify the facilitators and constraints to the use of economic evidence for vaccination policy and decision making in LMICs and the sustainability of the identified strategies.

Design

A scoping literature review was undertaken to generate the evidence. The review adhered to the first five steps of Arksey and O’Malley’s methodological framework (identifying and refining the research questions, identifying relevant articles, selection of studies, data extraction and charting and data synthesis) and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews.

Data sources

Full-text articles were searched on PUBMED, HINARI and DOAJ using different combinations of search words as of 16 December 2024

Eligibility criteria for selecting studies

We included articles from LMICs, including Africa, and global experiences, including those from LMICs. Papers must be written in English or have an English language translation available and published between 1 January 2004 and 16 December 2024.

Data extraction and synthesis

Two independent reviewers used standardised methods to search, extract, and screen included studies. The findings from the review were summarized in themes that were synthesized qualitatively.

Results

18 eligible articles met the inclusion criteria and were included in the synthesis. It was found that economic evidence was systematically requested and demonstrably influencing vaccine introduction or prioritisation decisions in only eight out of 32 LMIC settings with functional National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAGs) and in fewer than 20% of documented new vaccine introduction processes since 2015. In the majority of cases, decisions were reported as being driven primarily by disease burden, political priority, donor recommendations or historical precedent, with economic analyses either absent, produced post hoc or acknowledged but not used as a decisive factor.

Conclusions

There is minimal use of evidence from economics in decision-making within the immunisation ecosystem. Expert advisory committees in LMICS can, however, enhance the use of economic evidence in vaccination policy and decision-making. Hence, in order to use economic evidence for decision making, national advisory committees such as NITAGs need enhanced capacity, independence and close collaboration with researchers. LMIC NITAGs could also benefit from tailored adaptations, such as simplified cost-effectiveness tools and regional economic data hubs, to bridge this gap in decision-making and bring economic evidence to the fore of their decisions.

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