Pandemic behind 'largest backslide in childhood vaccination in a
generation' - U.N
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[July 15, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) -Around 25 million
children around the world missed out on routine vaccinations last year
that protect against life-threatening diseases, as the knock-on effects
of the pandemic continue to disrupt health care globally.
That is two million more children than in 2020, when COVID-19 caused
lockdowns around the world, and six million more than pre-pandemic in
2019, according to new figures released by the United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
UNICEF described the drop in vaccination coverage as the largest
sustained backslide in childhood vaccination in a generation, taking
coverage rates back to levels not seen since the early 2000s.
Many had hoped that 2021 would see some ground recovered after the first
year of the pandemic, but the situation actually worsened, raising
questions over catch-up efforts.
"I want to get across the urgency," UNICEF's senior immunisation
specialist, Niklas Danielsson told Reuters. "This is a child health
crisis."
The agency said that a focus on COVID-19 immunisation campaigns in 2021,
as well as the economic slowdown and strain on healthcare systems, had
stymied a quicker recovery for routine vaccinations.
Coverage dropped in every region, the figures showed, which are
estimated using data on the take-up of the three-dose diphtheria,
tetanus and pertussis (DTP3) jab and include both children who get no
jabs at all and those who miss on any of the three doses necessary for
protection. Globally, coverage fell by 5% to 81% last year.
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A nurse wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) for protection
against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) gives routine vaccines to
a baby held by his mother in a local health center in Manila,
Philippines January 27, 2021. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez
The number of "zero-dose" children,
who did not receive any vaccinations, rose by 37% between 2019 and
2021, from 13 to 18 million children mostly in low and middle-income
countries, the data showed.
For many diseases, more than 90% of children need to be vaccinated
in order to prevent outbreaks. There have already been reports of
rising cases of vaccine-preventable diseases in recent months,
including a 400% rise in measles cases in Africa in 2022.
"If we don't catch up on vaccinations quickly and
urgently, we will inevitably witness more outbreaks," said UNICEF's
Ephrem Tekle Lemango, saying Yemen and Afghanistan were among
countries with large and disruptive measles outbreaks in recent
months.
In 2021, 24.7 million children missed their first dose of measles
vaccine, and a further 14.7 million did not get the essential second
dose, the data showed. Coverage was 81%, the lowest since 2008.
The numbers are worked out using data from national health systems
in 177 countries.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Additional reporting by Emma Farge in
GenevaEditing by Raissa Kasolowsky and Kim Coghill)
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