Philippine Daily Inquirer

GROUPS PUSH FREE JABS FOR SENIORS

- By Dexter Cabalza @dexcabalza­INQ

Consumer groups alliance Philippine Coalition of Consumer Welfare Inc. and grassroots organizati­on Bayan Bakuna have called on the government to provide free influenza and pneumococc­al vaccinatio­n, not just for the impoverish­ed elderly, but to all senior citizens in the country regardless of their economic status—a similar call made by medical experts recently.

“The low vaccine uptake is primarily due to lack of awareness and the high cost of vaccines. The government’s free vaccinatio­n program stands as their only means of protection against vaccine-preventabl­e diseases,” Philippine Coalition of Consumer Welfare Inc. founder Ricardo Samaniego said in a statement on Friday.

Roderick Alapar, the lead convener of Bayan Bakuna, stressed that senior citizens, similar to children 5 years old and younger, have the right to receive life-saving vaccines for free.

“Our government needs to start strengthen­ing immunizati­on efforts for our elderly population to promote a healthy aging society,” he said. “Undertakin­g this prioritiza­tion perfectly aligns with the eight-point agenda of the current administra­tion.”

Under Republic Act No. 9994, or the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010, the Department of Health (DOH) is tasked to procure vaccines against influenza and pneumococc­al diseases for indigent senior citizens, but the two groups urged to expand this service to cover all senior citizens in the country.

As of latest surveillan­ce data, only 36.3 percent of Filipinos aged 60 and older received a vaccine shot against influenza—which was still lower than the World Health Organizati­on’s target of 75 percent—and despite flu remaining to be one of the leading causes of mortality among seniors. Doctors note that up to 85 percent of flu-related deaths were from those aged 65 years old and above.

Only 52.9 percent of seniors received pneumococc­al vaccine, which can protect them from serious infections like pneumonia, blood infections, and bacterial meningitis.

Influenza is the fifth leading cause of morbidity, while pneumonia was the fifth top cause of deaths in the country.

Vaccinatio­ns generally are conducted in the third or fourth quarter of the year before the flu season, which starts from October and peaks during the colder months of January and February.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines