UNICEF: Covid-19 disrupts
children’s vaccination in South Asia
Children vaccination campaign in Nepal amid lockdown (ANSA) |
South Asia is home to 4.5 million children who are either
not vaccinated or only partially vaccinated. Some 97% of them live in India,
Pakistan and Afghanistan.
By Robin Gomes
South Asia could face yet another health emergency if
children across the region do not receive their life-saving vaccine shots, the
United Nations children’s fund, UNICEF, warned on Tuesday.
It said nearly a quarter of the world’s unimmunized or
partially immunized children - about 4.5 million children - live in South Asia.
Almost all of them, 97 per cent, live in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
World Immunization Week
The warning comes during the April 24 to 30 World
Immunization Week, which is marked annually in the last week of April.
The aim of the week is to promote the use of vaccines to protect people of all
ages against disease. Immunization saves millions of lives every year and is
widely recognized as one of the world’s most successful and cost-effective
health interventions.
Yet nearly 20 million children in the world today are not
getting the vaccines they need.
Covid-19 disrupts vaccination, production
With lockdowns under the novel coronavirus emergency, UNICEF
said, routine immunizations have been severely disrupted, and parents are
increasingly reluctant to take their children to health centres for routine
vaccinations.
Sporadic outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases,
including measles and diphtheria, have already appeared in parts of Bangladesh,
Pakistan and Nepal.
The South Asia region is also home to two of the last polio
endemic countries in the world, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
According to Paul Rutter, Regional Health Advisor for UNICEF
Regional Office for South Asia (ROSA), “Vaccine stocks are running dangerously
low in some countries of the region as supply chains have been disrupted with
travel bans and cancelled flights.” “The manufacturing of the vaccines,” he
said, “has also been disrupted, creating additional shortages.”
Post-pandemic - hasten vaccination
Because of the coronavirus pandemic, many of the health
facilities throughout the region, where millions of children are normally
vaccinated, have been closed and outreach sessions have been suspended, adding
to the challenge.
“As long as frontline health workers take the appropriate
precautions, particularly washing their hands, there is no reason not to
vaccinate – in fact, it is crucial that vaccination continues,” Rutter said.
Across South Asia, national mass vaccination campaigns have
been postponed. Bangladesh and Nepal have postponed their national measles and
rubella campaigns while Pakistan and Afghanistan have suspended their polio
campaigns.
UNICEF strongly recommended that, where immunization
campaigns are suspended, governments begin rigorous planning now to intensify
immunization activities once the COVID -19 pandemic is under
control. (Source: UNICEF)
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