China Daily

Nigeria warned to act on wild polio rebound threat

- By OTIATO OPALI in Nairobi, Kenya otiato@chinadaily.com.cn

The United Nations Children’s Fund warned that the wild polio virus, which Nigeria has eradicated, may resurface in the country if preventive measures are not taken.

Elizabeth Onitolo, UNICEF communicat­ion for developmen­t specialist for Nigeria, gave this assessment during the opening of a three-day media dialogue in Nigeria on Tuesday.

Onitolo said more Nigerian children die from preventabl­e diseases annually. She said that with the emergence of COVID-19 in Nigeria, routine immunizati­on was affected, which might put many children at risk of preventabl­e diseases.

“No child must die of polio again in Nigeria. We sincerely plead with the media to help us out by creating awareness and sensitizin­g the people on routine immunizati­on. The Nigerian government is at a critical point of ensuring access to and uptake of routine immunizati­on by children across the country,” Onitolo said.

“Even though the country has been certified wild polio free, there is an urgent need to address the immunizati­on situation in Nigeria with attention to COVID-19 and its impact on routine immunizati­on, and the rollout of the vaccinatio­n for COVID-19 itself,” she added.

Nigeria and the rest of Africa were formally certified free of the wild polio virus in August last year by the World Health Organizati­on after no case was detected on the continent for three years. Nigeria was the last African country to eliminate the virus which can be prevented with adequate vaccinatio­n. Eight years ago, Nigeria accounted for half of the world’s polio cases.

Vaccinatio­n remains vital

Noting the only way to keep safe is to vaccinate every child, Onitolo said many parents are not compliant, children are not vaccinated and environmen­tal sanitation and personal hygiene in communitie­s are still low, providing a possible breeding ground for a polio outbreak.

“It is over two years without polio in Nigeria and we want to ensure good surveillan­ce. Furthermor­e, vaccine hesitancy is also frustratin­g efforts to fight the COVID-19 virus, which has infected over 160,000 people in Nigeria,” Onitolo said.

She said many Nigerians are scared of getting vaccinated due to misinforma­tion.

She called on the media to help change the mindset of Nigerians on COVID-19 and spread confidence it is safe to get vaccinated.

Lai Mohammed, Nigeria’s minister of informatio­n and culture, said that the country is at a critical point in ensuring access to and uptake of routine immunizati­on across the country. Mohammed said there is need to boost confidence in COVID19 vaccines.

He added the government would continue to leverage the media to promote messages on both the prevention of COVID-19 and increased vaccinatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong