Amid a resurgence of yellow fever outbreaks, the United Nations together with partners has begun an ambitious campaign to vaccinate close to one billion people against the deadly disease across Nigeria and 26 high-risk African countries.
“With one injection we can protect a person for life against this dangerous pathogen,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of the UN World Health Organization (WHO), launching the Eliminate Yellow Fever Epidemics (EYE) in Africa strategy in Nigeria’s capital Abuja alongside the country’s Health Minister, Isaac Folorunso Adewole.
The goal is to rid the continent of yellow fever – a viral disease with potentially fatal consequences – by 2026. “This unprecedented commitment by countries will ensure that by 2026 Africa is free of yellow fever epidemics,” added Mr. Tedros.
The three-pronged strategy focuses on protecting at-risk populations through preventive mass vaccination campaigns and routine immunization programmes; preventing international spread and containing outbreaks rapidly.
The campaign is also critical to protect Africa’s children – the group in which success is critical to stamp out the disease
“Almost half of the people to be vaccinated are children under 15 years of age [and]this campaign is critical to saving (their) lives,” said Stefan Peterson, the Chief of Health at UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF). As an EYE strategy partner, UNICEF will make vaccines available, advocate for greater political commitment, and provide support in vaccinating children through routine immunization as well as during outbreaks of the disease.
According to WHO, experience in West Africa demonstrates that the EYE strategy “can work.” When yellow fever re-emerged as a public health issue in the early 2000s, countries in the region controlled the epidemics through preventive mass campaigns combined with routine immunization.
“No yellow fever epidemics have been recorded since in countries which successfully implemented this approach,” the UN health agency added.
Source: UN