Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Immunisati­on plan set to be expanded

- Sanchita Sharma

NEW DELHI: India’s Intensifie­d Mission Indradhanu­sh (IMI) strategy that used cross-sectoral partnershi­ps to increase full immunisati­on coverage among children and women in 190 underserve­d districts by 18.5% in four months has been showcased as one of 12 global best practices at the Partners’ Forum conference inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Wednesday.

India plans to integrate the learnings from IMI with its universal immunisati­on programme, which is the largest in the world with annual cohorts of 26.7 million babies and 30 million pregnant women.

“We are not only making a case for better health, we are also making an argument for faster growth. Good health of women is one of the best ways of ensuring growth... the health of the mother will determine the health of her children, and the health of children will determine our tomorrow,” Modi said.

“In India, 44,000 women were dying giving birth in 2014, when this government took office. Under Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan, we asked doctors to pledge one day of their service each month, this way 16 million ante-natal checkups have been performed. One million newborns have received care through 794 state of the art special newborn care units. These interventi­ons have resulted in 840 lives of children saved each day,”modi said in his inaugural address at the Partners Forum for reproducti­ve, maternal, newborn and child health, which has around 1,200

participan­ts from 85 nations. India launched Mission Indradhanu­sh in April 2015 to reach the estimated 38% of children not getting basic vaccines in the first year of life and covered 25.5 million children and 6.9 million pregnant women by July 2017, increasing full immunisati­on coverage by 6.7% (7.9% in rural areas, 3.1% in urban) over 2015. The number of vaccines was increased from seven to 12 to protect against life-threatenin­g diseases like pneumonia and diarrhoea.

The intensifie­d mission was launched in 2017 to provide 90% full immunisati­on coverage to children aged 12-23 months in the districts where immunisati­on was 50.5% or less in 2015-16, compared to 62% average for all of India. These included 121 districts, 17 urban areas, and an additional 52 districts in the north-eastern states.

Following cycles of immunisati­on each month between October 2017 and January 2018, each lasting one week, full immunisati­on coverage went up to 69% in 190 of the lowest performing districts in India, according to a study published in a special issue of the medical journal BMJ.

“The success of Mission Indradhanu­sh shows that partnershi­ps with various government department­s work. The way forward is to not only intensify the Mission Indradhanu­sh programme but also our routine immunisati­on programme by integratin­g the other department­s to increase coverage,” said Preeti Sudan, secretary, ministry of health and family welfare.

Financed solely by the government and using existing staff and governance systems, IMI showcased that cross-sectoral participat­ion can be effective in vaccinatin­g those children at highest risk. The prime minister’s office and the Cabinet secretaria­t coordinate­d collaborat­ion between health and 12 nonhealth ministries, which included Women and Child Developmen­t; Panchayati Raj, Human Resource Developmen­t; Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviatio­n, among others. Vaccine supplies were tracked using the Electronic Vaccine Intelligen­ce Network and cold chain tracking programme, and distribute­d using the alternate vaccine delivery mechanism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India