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undervaccinated

Undervaccinated is a public health term used to describe individuals or populations whose vaccination status does not meet the recommended immunization schedule for their age and risk factors. It includes people who have never received certain vaccines, those who have started but not completed a vaccine series, and those who are missing required boosters. In some uses, it is distinguished from being unvaccinated, since partial protection may exist for some vaccines.

Measurement of undervaccination relies on vaccination coverage data. Public health agencies assess what proportion of a

Causes and risk factors are varied. Barriers to access, such as cost, transportation, or inconvenient clinic

Implications include increased susceptibility to vaccine-preventable diseases and a higher risk of localized outbreaks. If coverage

Prevention and response strategies focus on catch-up vaccination, reminder-recall systems, reducing access barriers, and targeted outreach.

population
is
up
to
date
with
recommended
vaccines
or
has
completed
the
necessary
series
by
a
given
age.
Data
quality
depends
on
record-keeping,
reporting,
and
population
mobility,
and
estimates
can
vary
by
location
and
subgroups.
hours,
can
lead
to
undervaccination.
Medical
contraindications
or
delayed
schedules
also
play
a
role,
as
do
hesitancy
and
misinformation.
Social,
cultural,
and
logistical
factors—such
as
rural
residence,
lower
health
literacy,
or
limited
contact
with
healthcare
systems—can
contribute
to
undervaccination
in
certain
communities.
falls
below
thresholds
needed
for
herd
immunity,
transmission
can
continue,
affecting
those
who
cannot
be
vaccinated
or
for
whom
vaccines
are
less
effective.
School-entry
requirements
and
clear,
evidence-based
communication
are
commonly
employed
to
increase
vaccination
uptake.