Africa Outlook

How sustainabl­e vaccinatio­n programmes can lift a country

Guinea-Bissau’s Minister of Public Health, Dr Magda Robalo, explains how vaccines do not just save lives, but transform countries by allowing more children to be educated and more people to thrive

- Written by: Dr Magda Robalo, Minister of Public Health of Guinea-Bissau

One in 10 children worldwide do not receive any vaccinatio­ns.

That means that a tenth of children do not benefit from health improvemen­ts brought about by centuries of scientific research. This is a figure that increases to one in five in Africa, a shocking number that has no place in the 21st century.

In Guinea-Bissau we have been working to change the trajectory of the unvaccinat­ed children curb, with the support of the Gavi Alliance.

Together, not only have we been able to start the journey towards implementi­ng a sustainabl­e and equitable immunisati­on programme, but by doing so, we have also started shaping the future of Guinea-Bissau’s children.

After all, vaccines do not just save lives, they transform countries by allowing more children to be educated, and more people to thrive physically and economical­ly.

In 2008, the Gavi Alliance funded the introducti­on of new vaccines in my country, including the ‘five in one’ vaccine – which protects against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio and Haemophilu­s influenzae type b disease – combined with increased vaccinatio­n outreach services and a more restrictiv­e wastage policy. In two years alone, from 2007 to 2009, vaccinatio­n coverage increased from 73 percent to 81 percent, which is a promising step towards reaching our goal of 90 percent. Through this programme we made great gains that will benefit my country, and Africa, for generation­s to come.

I’ve found that for any programme to be sustainabl­e and equitable, the community must be involved.

Communitie­s are as unique as individual­s, and each must be treated as such. The variation in attitudes towards immunisati­on is particular­ly prevalent in my country. Among Guinea-Bissau’s Regions, the percentage of fully vaccinated children ranges from 89.1 percent in Canchungo in the Cacheu Region, to 48.3 percent in Pirada, Gabú Region.

Across Africa, in 29 of 52 nations studied, coverage of the DPT3 vaccine varied by more than 25 percent at the department or district level. This discrepanc­y shows that each region requires different considerat­ions.

After all, with increasing freedom of movement, what good is complete immunisati­on in one region, if their neighbours are at risk?

Luckily, the public and private sectors are realising this, and more than ever before, vaccinatio­ns are reaching people who need them.

Throughout the last decade, known as the ‘decade of vaccines’, we have seen more people get vaccinated, and more lives saved. The World Health Organizati­on’s Global Vaccine Action Plan 2011 to 2020 continues this work through collaborat­ion with key stakeholde­rs.

It is important to celebrate these victories, to recognise the importance of the work done, and to push forward to achieve even more. While a lot

“VACCINES ARE ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL AND COST-EFFECTIVE HEALTH INVESTMENT­S IN HISTORY. HOWEVER, THIS IS ONLY TRUE WHEN WE COLLABORAT­E ACROSS COUNTRIES, ACROSS MINISTRIES AND ACROSS SECTORS”

has been done the journey is not yet complete, and African countries should look to prioritise the funding of such programmes with locally raised domestic resources.

Later this year, the Gavi Replenishm­ent Conference will bring together political leaders, civil society, public and private donors, vaccine manufactur­ers and government­s to support the global vaccinatio­n body Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

This organisati­on has done great work, and has protected 700 million children in countries like Malawi, Haiti and Cameroon from diseases such as measles, whooping cough and pneumonia since 2000.

Vaccines are one of the most successful and cost-effective health investment­s in history. However, this is only true when we collaborat­e across countries, across ministries and across sectors. We have seen the power that the global community has against disease through the Global Fund Replenishm­ent Forum Conference in September, when global leaders raised over $14 billion to fight AIDS, tuberculos­is and malaria. Not only did we break records, we ensured that over the next three years, those who needed help were in an even better position than before.

From leaders to health workers, we all have a role to play. Let’s unite for a successful GAVI replenishm­ent.

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