Kuwait Times

Cameroon launches historic large-scale malaria jab campaign

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Cameroon on Monday launched the first malaria vaccinatio­n program to be offered nationwide and as a matter of routine, AFP journalist­s saw, in a step the WHO has described as “historic”. The mosquito-borne disease kills more than 600,000 people a year, mainly in Africa, according to the World Health Organizati­on. Children under five years old account for more than 80 percent of deaths on the continent.

Following a pilot phase, the RTS,S vaccine is being rolled out at scale across Africa, starting in Cameroon. At a hospital in the town of Soa, 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the capital Yaounde, six-month-old Noah Ngah became the first to receive the injection at the facility. Cheered and encouraged by the nurses, the infant received the jab — much to the relief of his mother, who was waiting to have his twin sister vaccinated too. “Some parents are reticent but I know that vaccines are good for children,” their mother Helene Akono told AFP.

It is one of many vaccine centers in 42 districts designated a priority across the vast central African nation of some 28 million people. The jab will be offered free of charge, according to the government, and systematic­ally to all children under six months old at the same time as other obligatory or recommende­d vaccinatio­ns. The WHO, the UN children’s agency UNICEF and the Gavi vaccine alliance said in November that the move was “a historic step towards broader vaccinatio­n against one of the deadliest diseases for African children”.

Saving lives

More than 300,000 doses of RTS,S — the first malaria vaccine recommende­d by the UN’s WHO — arrived in Yaounde in late November. It took two months to organize Monday’s launch. Since 2019, more than two million children have been jabbed in Ghana, Kenya and Malawi in a pilot phase.

The drive resulted in substantia­l reductions in severe malaria illness and hospitaliz­ations. Cameroon is the first large-scale and systematic program in the world, according to the WHO, the coordinato­r of the campaign which is largely financed by Gavi. “In Cameroon, 30 percent of consultati­ons are linked to malaria,” Aurelia Nguyen, chief program officer of the Gavi vaccine alliance, told AFP. “Having a preventati­ve tool like the vaccine will free up the health system and result in fewer hospitaliz­ations and deaths.”—AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? SOA: Mothers with their children listen to a nurse giving advice at a hospital in Soa, Cameroon, on January 22, 2024.
— AFP SOA: Mothers with their children listen to a nurse giving advice at a hospital in Soa, Cameroon, on January 22, 2024.

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