Journal article

A global look at national Immunization Technical Advisory Groups

Article from Vaccine, Volume 28, Supplement 1, 19 April 2010, A13-A17. This paper presents the results of a global survey that aimed to collect information on country\'s immunization policy development processes, particularly on the presence and function of national Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (ITAGs).

Languages

  • Spanish

Publication year

2010

Publisher

WHO

Journal

Vaccine

Volume

1

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Programme management

Organisations

  • World Health Organisation (WHO)

Topic references

EPI-CORE-NITAGS

TitleAuthorYearTypeLanguage
A global look at national Immunization Technical Advisory GroupsPhilippe Duclos and al.2010Journal articleSpanish
Guidelines for defining NITAG annual work planSIVACGuidanceRussian
Indicators to assess National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAGs)Julia Blau et al.2013Journal articleEnglish
Informing decision makers: Experience and process of 15 National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups2010Journal articleSpanish
Moving forward on strengthening and sustaining National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAGs) globally: Recommendations from the 2nd global NITAG network meetingGlobal NITAG Network2017Journal articleEnglish
National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAGs): Guidance for their establishment and strengtheningPhilippe Duclos2010Journal articleSpanish
Resource Center for National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAGs) worldwideGlobal NITAG NetworkRepositorySpanish
Strengthening and sustainability of national immunization technical advisory groups (NITAGs) globally: Lessons and recommendations from the founding meeting of the global NITAG networkGlobal NITAG Network2017Journal articleEnglish
Supporting countries in establishing and strengthening NITAGs: Lessons learned from 5 years of the SIVAC initiativeNyambat Batmunkh et al.2014GuidanceSpanish
The role of NITAGs in strengthening national vaccine decision-making: A comparative case study of Armenia, Ghana, Indonesia, Nigeria, Senegal and UgandaHelen Walls, Natasha Howard, Sadie Bell, Sandra Mounier-JackJournal articleEnglish