Battle to kill sickness getting 'in the groove again' after flood in cases because of delay in inoculation crusades
loading...
Polio vaccination campaigns have resumed in Afghanistan and Pakistan –
the last two polio-endemic countries in the world – after a “surge” in
cases.
The pandemic halted campaigns in both countries in March and
confirmed cases have now reached 34 in Afghanistan and 63 in Pakistan –
where cases are being recorded in areas of the country previously free
of the disease.
Pakistan polio fears as Covid-19 causes
millions of children to miss vaccinations
Read more
According
to Afghanistan’s health ministry, most of the new cases this year have
been recorded in the southern provinces. “It’s a surge,” said Akmal
Samsour, a health ministry spokesperson.
“The reason is that we
didn’t have a door-to-door vaccination campaign over the last three
months as the ministry has been concerned that the volunteers who
vaccinate the children may help the [Covid-19] virus to spread.”
After
coronavirus left an estimated 50 million children without a polio
vaccine programmes restarted in three provinces in Afghanistan during
July, with a second campaign covering almost half of the country due to
start this month. In Pakistan an initial round of vaccinations took
place at the end of July, covering about 780,000 children, with a
nationwide campaign planned for later this month.
Pakistani
authorities said a three-day campaign would be launched in most
districts of the country, plus a longer five-day campaign in Karachi,
Peshawar, Khyber and Quetta.
“These life-saving vaccinations are
critical if children are to avoid yet another health emergency,” said
Jean Gough, Unicef director in South Asia. “As the world has come to see
only too well, viruses know no borders and no child is safe from polio
until every child is safe.”
“Although we have experienced new challenges and a setback in the fight against polio because of Covid-19, the eradication of this contagious disease will get back on track and is firmly within our reach,” Gough said.
0 Comments