Reach every child, adolescent and pregnant woman in the WHO South-East Asia Region with life-saving vaccines
At present, seven member countries’ routine immunisation programmes have achieved more than 90 per cent coverage with three doses of the basic diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine: Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, WHO Regional Director for South-East Asia.
It is imperative that every child, adolescent and pregnant woman in the WHO South-East Asia Region receives the life-saving benefits vaccines provide.
Whether to maintain the Region’s polio-free status and protect against the resurgence of maternal and neonatal tetanus (MNT), to achieve the Region-wide quest to eliminate measles, or to control ongoing challenges such as rubella, diphtheria, hepatitis B or human papillomavirus, immunisation is the most cost-effective way to protect individuals, communities and countries against a range of life-threatening and disabling diseases.
But to leverage vaccines’ full, life-saving potential, every child, adolescent and pregnant woman must be reached and the highest possible coverage attained.
To that end, Region-wide progress has been substantial. At present, seven member countries’ routine immunisation programmes have achieved more than 90 per cent coverage with three doses of the basic diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine. Almost half have achieved 95 per cent coverage of both doses of measles-containing vaccine. These are significant achievements. Region-wide, each member country should ensure all vaccines reach at least 90 per cent of the population at all times. Doing so will save countless lives, achieve herd immunity against vaccine-preventable diseases, and ensure newly introduced vaccines have optimal impact.
There are several ways to achieve this target. First, each member country should make immunisation a national priority and secure sustained, high-level political commitment to strengthening national immunisation programmes. Second, individuals and communities should be given the means to fully comprehend the value of vaccines and appreciate that immunisation is both their right and responsibility. Third, sustainable financing models should be developed to support national immunisation programmes, leveraging partnerships at the national, regional and global levels. And fourth, member countries should increase their research capacity, with particular focus on increasing coverage and equity and evaluating the effectiveness of different delivery, supply and communication strategies.
Alongside routine immunisation strengthening, supplementary immunization activities (SIAs) play an important role. Over the past 14 months alone, 113 million children received the measles and rubella vaccine as part of mass campaigns in Bangladesh, India and Indonesia. Those vaccines will have life-changing impact for each one of those children. SIAs carried out in Indonesia in 2015 and 2016 were meanwhile critical to protecting hundreds of thousands of women and neonates from MNT and achieving national (and regional) elimination of the problem.
In acknowledging the value of SIAs, member countries must take full advantage of them to strengthen routine immunisation programmes and help build the infrastructure needed to achieve at least 90 per cent routine coverage. Doing so will not only provide life-saving protection to millions of children, adolescents and pregnant women, but will also help achieve universal health coverage – a key Sustainable Development Goal.
As World Immunisation Week begins, obtaining society-wide buy-in to that outcome is crucial. Immunization is, after all, a political and social compact – one between citizen and state; individual and community. Being protected together means honoring that compact and reaching every child, adolescent and pregnant woman in the South-East Asia Region with the life-saving benefits vaccines provide.
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