Pertussis vaccination coverage in women at two months postpartum and associated factors in France, National Perinatal Survey 2021

Abstract

Background: Pertussis vaccination in young mothers aims to protect neonates through cocooning. We estimated pertussis vaccination coverage (VC) in women at two months postpartum in France in 2021, and the proportion of women who got vaccinated in the first two months postpartum; associated determinants were studied.

Methods: We used data from the 2021 National Perinatal Surveys conducted in metropolitan France (ENP 2021) and French overseas territories (ENP-DROM 2021). Multivariate poisson regressions were employed to study the following determinants: age, educational level, monthly household income, socio-professional situation, birth country, parity, health professional who monitored pregnancy, influenza vaccination during pregnancy, region of residence, prenatal care consultations, having health insurance, having a partner, and having a chronic pathology. Results were weighted.

Results: The study sample comprised 7999 women. Estimated pertussis VC at two months postpartum was 66.8 % (95 %CI [65.5-68.0]). VC was significantly lower in i) unemployed women (vs. executives/managers, intermediate and higher intellectual professionals), ii) those on low income (vs. high), and iii) those with two or more children (vs. primiparous). It was significantly higher in i) women born in France, ii) those vaccinated against influenza during pregnancy, iii) those who received pre-natal care from a private midwife, and iv) those with more prenatal consultations. The proportion of women vaccinated against pertussis in the two-month postpartum period (33.4 % [31.7-35.9]) was significantly lower in i) women on low incomes, ii) unemployed women, iii) women with health insurance, and iv) multiparous women. It was significantly higher in those vaccinated against influenza during pregnancy.

Discussion – conclusion: Pertussis VC in women at two months postpartum in 2021 was insufficient and was marked by social and territorial inequalities in health. Vaccination for pregnant women has been recommended in France since 2022. A study monitoring the impact of this new recommendation is essential.