This article proposes an overview of anthropological studies concerning childhood immunization in Madagascar, where vaccine coverage still remains low. The COVID-19 epidemic has heightened the reticence of populations to be vaccinated in the public health centres of this country. It appears necessary to study the factors which may impact immunization practices and its representations. The principal results of these studies describe immunization from the perspective of parents of children under five years of age. The role that they attribute to a vaccine is essentially that of reinforcing the health of children against illness. There is a misunderstanding of combination vaccines, one vaccine generally being associated with one disease. The findings also show a complex relationship with immunization, injections and the health passport. Finally, uptake of immunization or not is motivated by the structural and local context such as the perceived frailness of the newborn baby, the practice of post-partum confinement, or the lack of knowledge about the vaccine. Lack of understanding of immunization and mistrust of it are signs of a fragile health system. An in-depth analysis of immunization and the impact of COVID-19 on its perception will provide a clearer view of the fragility of the immunization programmes implemented in Madagascar.
Keywords: Anthropology; Epidemic; Immunization; Madagascar; Perceptions.
© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.