Khaleej Times

Vaccinate your kids. It’s a matter of life and death

Parents have a responsibi­lity to prevent serious health conditions in children. They need to be made aware and follow medical advice about preventive jabs.

- Radhika BatRa

Afour-year-old girl recently came to the emergency room where I work as a resident doctor. She was writhing in pain, her body convulsed with seizures. My team and I moved fast to activate seizure protocol, secure her intravenou­s drip, and deliver all appropriat­e medication­s. We then performed a test: I blew air toward her, and she collapsed in pain; I offered her water, and her agony intensifie­d sharply. The diagnosis was clear: she had rabies — and it was too late to save her.

The girl’s family knew that a dog had bitten her, but they had been told that traditiona­l herbs would heal her, so they had delayed taking her to the hospital. She died after less than a day in our care. Had her parents taken her to a hospital immediatel­y for the anti-rabies serum and the appropriat­e vaccinatio­n — she would still be alive. Her grief-stricken mother’s tormented screams still echo in my mind.

As a resident doctor in paediatric­s, I am no stranger to death. But watching an innocent child succumb to an ailment that is so easily prevented by a simple interventi­on takes a severe toll. After all, the little girl I watched die that day was hardly an anomaly.

Despite significan­t progress on expanding global immunisati­on, the World Health Organizati­on reports that coverage has stalled at about 85 per cent in recent years. According to Unicef, nearly 20 million children under the age of one did not receive the three recommende­d doses of DPT (the vaccinatio­n for diphtheria, whooping cough, and tetanus) in 2017, and nearly 21 million did not receive a single dose of measles vaccine. The WHO estimates that 1.5 million deaths could be avoided each year if global immunisati­on coverage improved.

Moreover, there have been persistent shortfalls in delivering vitamin A supplement­s — an important component of immunisati­on protocols, often administer­ed alongside routine vaccines. This has contribute­d to blindness in 1.4 million people — 75 per cent of them in Asia and Africa.

The story in my country, India, is consistent with this global reality. India has a strong health-care system. And in 1985, the government establishe­d the Universal Immunizati­on Plan — a much-acclaimed programme that aims to provide at least 85 per cent coverage.

Yet, according to Unicef, India’s national average for immunisati­on stands at just 62 per cent, with little progress having been made in recent years. India has more non-immunised children — 7.4 million — than any other country.

As is so often the case, immunisati­on coverage reflects deep inequities. Children in rural areas are less likely than their urban counterpar­ts to have received a complete set of vaccinatio­ns; girls receive far fewer vaccines than boys; and poor children fare far worse than wealthier ones.

The hospital where I work is located in the slums of Ghaziabad, India, which has a huge population of migrants who have left their villages in search of employment. Conditions are difficult: overcrowdi­ng, poor sanitation, and an erratic and low-quality water supply undermine the health of all residents — especially the children. Substance abuse is rampant.

In many cases, both parents must work long hours to make ends meet. They lack enough money for healthy and diverse foods, leaving their children eating primarily the lowest-quality rice. Unsurprisi­ngly, they have little time or resources to dedicate to meeting their children’s routine healthcare needs, such as immunisati­on.

This injustice is indefensib­le. It is only when we delve deep into the depths of truth do we realise the magnitude of atrocities in the world. Children falling ill, becoming disabled, or all too often dying from preventabl­e causes is among humankind’s most shameful failings, particular­ly when one considers that, according to the WHO, no single preventive health interventi­on is more cost-effective than immunisati­on.

While expanding immunisati­on coverage is undoubtedl­y challengin­g, there is no excuse not to be making steady progress with low-cost, scalable, and sustainabl­e solutions. To take topdown immunisati­on schemes to the doorsteps of the disadvanta­ged, government­s and civil society must work together to establish and expand efficient last-mile channels for vaccine delivery, accounting for barriers ranging from

lack of awareness to out-of-pocket cost.

Had she been vaccinated against rabies, that four-year-old girl could have lived, gone to school, made friends, fallen in love, experience­d heartbreak, fallen in love again. She might even have decided to dedicate herself to studying to become a doctor like me. Instead, she died, having barely lived, in searing agony.

Persistent gaps in vaccinatio­n coverage must be addressed on a war-like footing. Children will continue to suffer and die — and devastated mothers will continue to weep over them — unless we embrace the battle. If not, we shall continue to lose innocent lives and mothers will mourn loud and long. We cannot be blind to their plight any longer. We cannot turn a deaf ear to their laments. —Project Syndicate Radhika Batra, a medical doctor, is Founder and President of Every Infant Matters, India

Children in rural areas are less likely than their urban counterpar­ts to have received a complete set of vaccinatio­ns; girls receive fewer vaccines than boys.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates