The Borneo Post

UN sounds ‘red alert’ on global immunisati­on backslide

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NEW YORK: Increased misinforma­tion and the disruption of global supply chains due to Covid are behind the biggest sustained drop in childhood vaccinatio­ns in three decades, a UN report said Thursday.

The percentage of children who received three doses of the vaccine against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) fell five percentage points between 2019 and 2021 to 81 per cent, according to official data published by WHO and Unicef.

This vaccine is used as a marker for immunisati­on coverage within and across countries.

Catherine Russell, Unicef executive director, said the slide ‘is a red alert for child health.’

“We are witnessing the largest sustained drop in childhood immunisati­on in a generation. The consequenc­es will be measured in lives,” she added.

Some 25 million children missed out on one or more doses of DTP in 2021, two million more than those who missed out in 2020 and six million more than in 2019, putting a growing number of children at risk from preventabl­e disease.

The slide was attributed to multiple factors including an increased number of children living in conflict zones, rising misinforma­tion and service and supply disruption­s from the Covid pandemic, and lockdowns that limited outreach campaigns. Of the 25 million, 18 million did not receive a single dose of DTP during 2021, “the vast majority of whom live in lowand middle-income countries,” a statement said.

India, Nigeria, Indonesia, Ethiopia and the Philippine­s recorded the highest numbers of zero-dose children.

Around the world, a quarter of the coverage of human papillomav­irus HPV vaccines achieved in 2019 has been lost, a blow in the fight against cervical cancers.

Only 12 per cent of girls are fully protected, despite the first vaccines being licensed over 15 years ago.

Observers had hoped 2021 would be a year of recovery after the lockdowns of 2020 – but instead it was the worst year for DTP coverage since 2008, and came against a backdrop of rising rates of severe acute malnutriti­on.

“The convergenc­e of a hunger crisis with a growing immunisati­on gap threatens to create the conditions for a child survival crisis,” the statement said.

First dose measles coverage dropped to 81 per cent in 2021, also the lowest level since 2008. Declines were seen in every region, though some countries including Uganda and Pakistan bucked the negative trend.

The global organisati­ons called on countries to intensify their catch-up vaccinatio­n efforts. The detailed datasets can be accessed on the Unicef and WHO websites.

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