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The Promise of Vaccines
By Osman David Mansoor
Posted on
July 6, 2011
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Vaccines are the most cost-effective means of
ensuring childhood survival. While immunization rates in developing
countries have risen steadily in recent years, health officials continue
their efforts to reach more children every year.
Osman David Mansoor, MD, is a
senior advisor for new vaccines in the Health Section of the United
Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). A public health physician, Mansoor
came to UNICEF from the World Health Organization’s Regional Office of
the Pacific and the Ministry of Health in New Zealand.
Few health interventions yield
greater benefits for children than immunization, a proven,
cost-effective way to reduce child death and disability rates.
The benefits are
indisputable and the consequences of failing to sustain and enhance
immunization cannot be overstated: Diseases once under control will
reemerge and spread to countries where they had been eliminated.
Millions of children in the developing world would become sick or
disabled. Millions would die.
Vaccine-preventable diseases are
estimated to cause more than 2 million deaths every year. Among those,
1.4 million are children under five. These children are dying from
measles (395,000), whooping cough (290,000), and neonatal tetanus
(257,000).
These numbers represent not merely
statistics, but young lives, the human assets of a nation. When the
health and futures of a nation’s youngest citizens are threatened by
disease, the nation cannot thrive.
These deaths are all the more
tragic because these diseases can be prevented by vaccines currently
recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). An additional 1.1
million young children die every year from infections of pneumococcus, a
bacteria that causes meningitis, pneumonia, or other conditions; and of
rotavirus, which causes severe diarrhea
Building on the success of the
globally coordinated smallpox eradication program, achieved in 1977, WHO
established the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) in 1974. Over
time, the effort has led to steadily increasing levels of routine
immunization of children. In fact, since 1990, more than 70 percent of
the world’s infants have been receiving four vaccines, offering
protection against six diseases: tuberculosis, polio, diphtheria,
tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), and measles.
The hundreds of thousands of
children still dying from these diseases, as noted above, give urgency
to the remaining work that must be completed. Adding the available
vaccines for pneumococcus and rotavirus to the routine immunization
regimen offers the potential to prevent many more deaths.
With the establishment of the
Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) in 1999 and the
renewed and concerted efforts of the World Health Organization (WHO),
UNICEF, and other immunization partners, global immunization coverage
has slowly but steadily improved in the new century. The additional
investments generated by GAVI and the heightened attention given to
immunization in the poorest countries are yielding results (see Figure
1).
GAVI and its alliance partners are
helping to implement the 1992 WHO recommendation that all countries add
hepatitis B to their EPI schedule. As a
result, by 2005 more than 80
percent of countries had implemented routine hepatitis B infant
immunization. Protecting every child, especially those born of mothers
with chronic hepatitis B infection, prevents the development of liver
cancer and cirrhosis in later life.
Despite the improvements in the
number of children who are routinely vaccinated, much remains to be
done. In 2005, WHO and UNICEF developed the Global Immunization Vision
and Strategy (GIVS), 2006-2015. The strategy sets a goal for all
countries to reach at least 90 percent of infants with all recommended
immunizations and at least 80 percent in every district (or equivalent).
Achieving the GIVS goals will save the lives of 4 to 5 million children
every year by 2015. The poor and underserved in developing countries are
consistently missing out on the life-saving protection of immunization.
In 2005 more than 27 million children did not receive the three doses of
diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine (DTP) needed to protect them
against those diseases and 30 million were not inoculated with the
required doses of measles vaccine.
To improve coverage, national and
district planners need to dedicate resources and develop specific
strategies to reach the currently underserved populations. Many
countries already use the Reach Every District (RED) approach, which
seeks greater equity and availability of routine immunization services.
In addition to protecting children
from vaccine-preventable diseases, immunization programs reduce the
transmission of disease in the community and protect the unvaccinated.
For some diseases, such as polio, immunization can actually lead to
total eradication—as happened with smallpox.
Remarkable progress has been made
in expanding immunization coverage and the effort must not wane. Every
child, no matter his or her socioeconomic status, deserves to be
protected from disease. Immunization programs also serve as a platform
to deliver other life-saving interventions such as those against
malnutrition, malaria, polio, and intestinal worms. Such an integrated
approach is the most effective way to protect the health of all
children, including the most marginalized. It is also a cost-effective
way to build up health care systems to better ensure that progress
becomes sustainable and is not lost. When this happens, the overall
impact of immunization on child survival becomes far greater than the
sum of its parts
UNICEF’s Ahmed Magan, Jessica Malter, and Jeff McFarland also
contributed to this article .
The opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect
the views or policies of the U.S. government.
This article is from the March 2007 edition of eJournal USA,
“Lifesaving Vaccines.”
(Source: U.S. Department of State)
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Abbia un viaggio sicuro!
¡Tenga un viaje seguro!
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