# Quality and usability of home-based record photos to assess vaccine coverage: A case study from the 2022 Democratic Republic of the Congo Vaccine Coverage Survey

**Authors:** Dorcas M. Kibeti, Nicole A. Hoff, Sydney Merritt, Aimée M. Lulebo, Jean-Bosco N. Kasonga, Nono M. Mvuama, Christophe L. Luhata, Dalau M. Nkamba, John Samuel Otomba, Amine El Mourid, Aimé M.W. Cikomola, Jean-Crispin Mukendi, Marcellin Mengouo Nimpa, Daniel K. Ishoso, Adèle N. Mudipanu, Deo Manirakiza, Anne W. Rimoin, Didine K. Kaba, Jean K. Nyandwe, M. Carolina Danovaro-Holliday, Paul-Samson D. Lusamba, Eric M. Mafuta

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2025.127248 · 2025-06-20

## TL;DR

This study examines the quality and usability of home-based record photos from the 2022 DRC Vaccine Coverage Survey to assess vaccine coverage and compares them to field-entered data.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates the feasibility of using HBR photos for central data entry to assess vaccine coverage with moderate agreement.

## Key findings

- Over 90% of selected children had adequate quality HBR photos.
- Most HBRs met quality criteria for physical condition and legibility.
- Concordance between field and central data entry varied significantly by vaccine.

## Abstract

Home-based records (HBRs) are often considered the “gold-standard” for determining vaccination status - especially for vaccination coverage surveys (VCS). However, data on the quality and usability of HBRs when collected at the source (household) as opposed to photos for recording at a central level is scarce. This study explores the usability of HBR photographs taken during the 2022 VCS of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). It compares results from analyses of HBR transcribed in the field and those entered from corresponding photos sent to a central server in the assessment of vaccine coverage. This analysis included a random sample of 2768 children aged 12–23 months who had both HBR data entered at the time of the survey and a corresponding photo. Using the card photo, a team of 6 independent researchers transcribed the cards and assessed HBR characteristics based on a predefined set of criteria related to data quality, entry and HBR quality. Data were summarized using proportions; agreement was assessed using concordance and Kappa-Cohen statistics. Over 90 % of selected children had photos considered adequate. Most HBRs met the set quality criteria in terms of physical condition and legibility. The majority (84.6 %) included the Ministry of Health logo and listed all the vaccines in the routine immunization schedule. Concordance and the Kappa-Cohen statistic showed high levels of variability of agreement by vaccine between the two sources of data. This study illustrates that entering vaccine data using photos of HBR at a central level versus at the time of survey is feasible and can provide accurate results with moderate agreement. Further, this approach can also reduce the time per survey in the field, if interviewers are only required to take a photograph. Additionally, having an HBR photo available can be useful for secondary analyses and further training.

•Home-based records (HBRs) allow immunization tracking without recall bias but may slow fieldwork due to added time for data entry.•Over 90% of 2,768 children randomly selected from the DRC National Vaccine Coverage Survey had quality HBR photos included as part of their interview data.•Concordance between HBR reported vaccine status when entered in the field and at the central level varied considerably by individual vaccine.

Home-based records (HBRs) allow immunization tracking without recall bias but may slow fieldwork due to added time for data entry.

Over 90% of 2,768 children randomly selected from the DRC National Vaccine Coverage Survey had quality HBR photos included as part of their interview data.

Concordance between HBR reported vaccine status when entered in the field and at the central level varied considerably by individual vaccine.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** measles (MESH:D008457), MCD (MESH:D012514), HBR (MESH:D019292), infectious diseases (MESH:D003141), Yellow fever (MESH:D015004), allergies (MESH:D004342), VPDs (MESH:D000079263), diseases (MESH:D004194), VCS (MESH:D004673)
- **Chemicals:** Calmette (-), Vitamin A (MESH:D014801)
- **Species:** Rotavirus (genus) [taxon 10912], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12154206/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12154206