Arab News

Botched anti-measles drive kills 15 children in South Sudan

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JUBA: Fifteen young children have died in a botched measles vaccinatio­n campaign that saw people as young as 12 years old administer­ing the vaccines, South Sudan’s government announced on Friday.

The UN said the children died of “severe sepsis/toxicity” from the contaminat­ed vaccine, and the Health Ministry blamed the deaths on human error. One syringe was used for all the children during the four-day campaign, and the vaccine was stored without refrigerat­ion the entire time.

Measles is yet another challenge facing the desperatel­y poor East African country that already has been devastated by more than three years of civil war and a recently declared famine, as well as a cholera outbreak.

The government said all of the children who died were under the age of 5. It is setting up a commission to determine who is responsibl­e and whether victims’ families will be compensate­d.

The measles vaccinatio­n campaign is targeting more than 2 million children across the country. About 300 children were targeted in the area where the children’s deaths occurred.

The children died in the rural town of Kapoeta in early May. Another 32 children suffered fever, vomiting and diarrhea but recovered, a joint statement by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and the UN children’s agency UNICEF said.

Abdulmumin­i Usman, WHO’s country representa­tive in South Sudan, said earlier this week that even after the organizati­on became aware of the deaths, the measles campaign continued across the country except in Kapoeta. “This campaign is lifesaving,” said Usman.

WHO provides some training to South Sudan’s health officials and the UN children’s agency provides the vaccines to the government. It was not immediatel­y clear whether any UN official were present at the time of the botched vaccinatio­ns.

The joint statement by WHO and UNICEF said the vaccinatio­n team involved in the deaths was “neither qualified nor trained.” It called the deaths a “tragic event.”

Dr. Samson Baba, an immunizati­on official in the Health Ministry, refused to comment on the deaths earlier this week.

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