Congo,
Angola begin mass vaccination drive against yellow fever
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[August 17, 2016]
By Benoit Nyemba
KINSHASA (Reuters) - Democratic Republic of
Congo and Angola began one of the biggest ever emergency vaccination
campaigns in Africa this week, working with the World Health
Organization (WHO) to curb a yellow fever epidemic that has killed
hundreds this year.
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Health officials expect to vaccinate 14 million people over the next
10 days including some 8.5 million in the densely populated
Congolese capital, Kinshasa, where the disease's presence has
sparked fears of a far wider spread.
Vaccinations started in Angola on Monday and about 41,000 health
workers have been deployed across more than 8,000 sites with 17.3
million syringes available regionally, WHO said on Tuesday. There
are about 6,000 suspected cases in the region.
A small but significant fraction of cases die from jaundice,
bleeding and multiple organ failure. More than 400 people have died
of the virus since December.
The campaign is being accelerated to try to stop it spreading before
the rainy season starts in September and makes more remote parts of
the region inaccessible. Other challenges include a lack of reliable
power to keep vaccines cold.
"By the end of this vaccination campaign ... we are going to put an
end to the progression of yellow fever," Congo's Minister of Health,
Felix Kabange Numbi Kabange, told reporters on Tuesday at a ceremony
to mark the start of the campaign.
China and Japan, the World Bank, WHO and the U.N. Children's Fund as
well as the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization are
financing the campaign, WHO spokesman in Congo, Eugene Kabambi,
said.
About 2 million people were vaccinated in Kinshasa during campaigns
in May and July. Overall, some 13 million people in Angola and 3
million in Congo have been vaccinated this year.
The outbreak has spread as far as China, carried by workers
returning from Angola, but WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said on
Tuesday he was optimistic it could be contained.
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"The WHO Emergency Committee will reconvene in coming weeks (and)
will re-evaluate the situation but we think that the outbreak is
manageable if we can protect enough people with the vaccine," he
told reporters in Geneva.
The campaign also marks the first time that fractional doses of the
vaccine will be given in order to stretch limited supplies amid a
global shortage.
The one-fifth dose, which will be used in Kinshasa, protects for at
least 12 months but does not give lifelong immunity.
(Additional reporting by Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by
Aaron Ross; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Louise Ireland)
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