Immunization dashboard
Visualize and navigate immunization data across Europe and Central Asia countries

Immunization is central to protecting children’s health and well-being, allowing them to live free of many forms of disability and illness. The Europe and Central Asia region has developed the immunization dashboard that helps to get vaccination statistics from all the countries in Europe and Central Asia in one place and see them visually. The immunization dashboard gives compiled information for immunization coverage, vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks, new vaccine introduction, immunization supply chain and vaccine demand status in Europe and Central Asia region.
Country data are reported annually through the WHO/UNICEF Joint Reporting Form on Immunization (JRF). Additionally, information is collected via EVM assessment reports, behavioral insight surveys conducted by the UNICEF country offices and supply chain data collected from the countries.
The dashboard can help countries monitor improvements and identify gaps for evaluation. The data sets can be visualized fully or by selecting individual country.
How to use this dashboard
Navigating the dashboard
The dashboard has 11 pages. Page 1 gives a regional overview of the data; page 2 to 10 describes the different indicators for the selected country and page 11 describes the various sources of data used to develop the dashboard and calculation of the indicators used.
On page 1, click on antigen tabs on left side of page to view the information of country wise vaccination coverage and click on unimmunized tab to view the number of children that did not receive the specific vaccine in given year. Click on vaccine preventable diseases (Diphtheria, Measles and Polio) to view the vaccine preventable disease (VPD) outbreak data. By clicking on new vaccine status, you can check the status of PCV, Rota and HPV vaccine introduction status in the country in given year.
The page 2 describes the immunization coverage at national level, page 3 and 4 describes sub-national coverage data, page 5 gives information about the VPD outbreaks, page 6 and 7 gives an overview of various immunization equity indicators, page 8 describes immunization supply chain data of the country, page 9 gives an overview of financial expenditure on routine immunization vaccines and page 10 gives an update of the vaccine demand related indicators in the country.
How to filter data by country or year
On right side at top, select the year to view the data for specific year. On page 2 to 10, select the country from the tab on left side of page at top and view the country specific data. You can move the cursor to the chart to view the specific data for each indicator.
Glossary
Vaccine coverage: Percentage of infants (children under one year of age) who received certain vaccine-doses. For example, coverage of DTP3 is the percentage of infants who received all three doses of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) vaccine.
Un-vaccinated: An infant that has not received any vaccine. In this regional profile, un-vaccinated is defined as an infant who has not received any DTP vaccine (not vaccinated for DTP1). It is also used as a proxy for "zero-dose".
Un-immunized: An infant who did not receive the specific vaccine dose as per the national schedule. For example, un-immunized DTP3 is an infant who did not receive all 3 doses of DTP vaccine or unimmunized MCV1 is an infant who did not receive first dose of measles vaccine.
Vaccine-Doses:
- Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG): vaccine against tuberculosis.
- Diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis vaccine, first dose (DTP1) and third dose (DTP3).
- Hepatitis B vaccine, birth dose (HepB BD).
- Hepatitis B vaccine, third dose (HepB3).
- Poliomyelitis vaccine, third dose (Polio3).
- Measles containing vaccine, first dose (MCV1) and second dose (MCV2).
- Rotavirus vaccine, last dose (Rota).
- Pneumococcal vaccine, third dose (PCV3).
- Human Papillomavirus vaccine, last dose (HPV): vaccine to protect against certain types of human papillomavirus that can lead to cancer or genital warts.