Hello, welcome to Health Check from the BBC.
I'm Claudia Hammond and we have scoured the globe for the latest health stories that matter.
In a moment,
why progress with childhood vaccinations has been stalling since 2010 in some parts of the world.
Plus, could using a hearing aid make you less likely to have a fall?
And to help me today, I have Monica Lakenpole,
who is Professor of Integrated Community Child Health at University College London.
How are you?
I'm very good.
Thank you very much.
And what do you have for us?
today.
Well, one of the things we'll be covering is the Dunedin study from New Zealand.
It's a long-running cohort study where they've really followed babies right up to adulthood.
So very interesting study for us to be discussing today.
Yeah, it's fascinating that because the babies that were in that are now in their 50s.
So they've managed to find out all sorts of things about health from there.
But I want to start with the trends in routine childhood vaccination.
A global pool of researchers has published the figures for vaccine coverage across the world from 1980 onwards and has forecasts for the next five years too.
And this is in the journal The Lancet.