Philippine Daily Inquirer

Building disaster resilience in PH

- By Jovic Yee @jovicyeein­q the same period last year.

High-level officials from the government and the private sector gathered for the 2019 Top Leaders Forum aimed at building a more resilient Philippine­s. Organized by SM Prime Holdings in partnershi­p with the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, this year’s forum held in Pasay City tackled the country’s state of preparedne­ss for disasters and explored ways to translate science into action and meaningful impact.

As the Philippine­s reels from a measles outbreak, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III stressed the need for children to be fully vaccinated following a recent Harvard study which showed that contractin­g the respirator­y disease made one susceptibl­e to infections one was previously immune to.

Researcher­s from Harvard Medical School (HMS) found that someone who fell ill from measles could suffer from immune amnesia as the virus “wipes out 11 percent to 73 percent of the different antibodies that protect against viral and bacterial strains a person was previously immune to.”

Antibodies

“So, if a person had 100 different antibodies against chickenpox before contractin­g measles, they might emerge from a case of measles with only 50, cutting their chickenpox protection in half. That protection could dip even lower if some of the antibodies lost are potent defenses known as neutralizi­ng antibodies,” HMS said in a statement.

Duque said the HMS report gave a “very compelling” reason parents should not miss out on having their children vaccinated against measles, especially as this impaired one’s protection against vaccine-preventabl­e diseases like pertussis, diphtheria and even polio to which there is also an ongoing outbreak.

“It makes more sense to really have your children vaccinated because we now have this kind of problem,” he said.

In the country, the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is given in two doses—first when a child turns 9 months old and when he reaches 1 year old. In February, the Department of Health (DOH) declared a measles outbreak as the immunizati­on coverage rate dropped to a dismal 40 percent.

It attributed the decline to parents refusing to have their children vaccinated following the controvers­ial implementa­tion of the dengue vaccine Dengvaxia, as well as their lack of time to bring them to health centers for free routine vaccinatio­n.

As a result, the number of measles cases this year soared by more than 157 percent. As of Oct. 26, there had been 42,757 measles cases nationwide, with 566 deaths, compared to only 16,628 cases with 147 deaths during

58% unvaccinat­ed

Most affected were children age 1 to 4 and those below 9 months. They comprised a combined 52 percent of all cases. The majority of those who fell ill (58 percent) were unvaccinat­ed.

While HMS researcher­s said measles survivors “gradually regain their previous immunity to other viruses and bacteria,” this could take “months to years,” making them “vulnerable in the meantime to serious complicati­ons of those infections.”

This is why they suggested that booster shots for such cases as hepatitis and polio be given to strengthen the immunity of those who had measles.

“Revaccinat­ion following measles could help to mitigate long-term suffering that might stem from immune amnesia and the increased susceptibi­lity to other infections,” the researcher­s said.

Duque said that because the HMS study is new informatio­n, they would have to first plan and look into how to go about with providing booster shots. But for now, he said the priority is ensuring that children are immunized against all vaccinepre­ventable diseases.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines