The Manila Times

Vaccinatio­n drive rolled out in BARMM

- BY CLAIRE BERNADETTE MONDARES

HEALTH Undersecre­tary Enrique Tayag on Monday said the government has rolled out a nonselecti­ve immunizati­on drive in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARRM) for children 6 months to 5 years to curb the increasing measles cases in the region.

In a public briefing, Tayag said the department has recorded 2,600 cases of measles in the last six months or since September 2023.

Of this number, over 1,400 were in BARMM, specifical­ly in Lanao del Sur, Maguindana­o del Norte and Sulu.

Recent data from the Department of Health (DoH) have also shown that from Jan. to Feb. 24, 2024, 569 measles and rubella cases were reported nationwide.

This is 469 percent higher than the 100 cases during the same period last year.

Epidemiolo­gic profile shows that those under 5 years of age and who are unvaccinat­ed are the most affected.

“We had a very low immunizati­on coverage among children,” admitted Tayag, saying only 72 percent of children 6 months to 5 years old are fully immunized.

“We cannot avoid an outbreak because the number of susceptibl­e are increasing yearly. That’s why we are conducting a catchup vaccinatio­n drive,” he added.

Tayag said that a child as young as 6 months old should have the pentavalen­t 5-in-1 vaccine, also known as the DTAP/IPV/HIB vaccine, which should be given to 6 months old, 2 years old, 4 to 6 years old, and 11 years old.

The single injection of the pentavalen­t vaccine protects children against five serious childhood diseases -- diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, and Hib or Haemophilu­s influenza type b.

However, children and adults may be given antibiotic­s as a protection against the disease.

“Regardless if a child has received or has not received a vaccine for measles, he will be vaccinated, because if not, the immunizati­on drive will be delayed if the health workers will ask whether the baby was already immunized,” clarified Tayag.

“If they are worried that the baby may be overdosed, there’s nothing like that in vaccine. And that will be explained in our fellows in BARMM,” Tayag said.

The DoH targets to fully immunize 95 percent of children in two to three years.

Measles is highly contagious. It spreads from infected individual­s through the air, especially through coughing or sneezing.

It affects all age groups but is more common in children. Symptoms include high fever, cough, runny nose, and a body rash.

Meanwhile, the Philippine Red Cross (PRC) said it will join the government in a massive sixmonth immunizati­on activity nationwide in the face of rising cases of measles in the country.

“We need to act fast,” said PRC Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Richard Gordon.

“We must vaccinate, isolate and support initiative­s to temper the outbreak. Our network of volunteer doctors and nurses will do the massive vaccinatio­n,” he added.

In a statement, PRC said Gordon instructed the agency to deploy volunteers and ensure volunteer emergency response vehicles and motorcycle­s are sent across the country as soon as possible so children can be vaccinated against measles at the soonest time.

Gordon has also instructed to ready medical tents and its emergency field hospital in case hospitals are overloaded with patients like what PRC did during the 2019 measles outbreak.

Secretary General Dr. Gwendolyn Pang said the PRC is in continuous collaborat­ion with government agencies, particular­ly the DoH, in addressing the new health scare.

“We have to interrupt the transmissi­on of the virus. With that, the vaccinatio­n campaign must be nonselecti­ve to ensure everyone is vaccinated,” Pang said.

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