People lost faith in childhood vaccines during COVID pandemic, UNICEF
says
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[April 20, 2023]
By Jennifer Rigby and Emma Farge
LONDON (Reuters) - People all over the world lost confidence in the
importance of routine childhood vaccines against killer diseases like
measles and polio during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new
report from UNICEF.
In 52 of the 55 countries surveyed, the public perception of vaccines
for children declined between 2019 and 2021, the UN agency said.
The data was a "worrying warning signal" of rising vaccine hesitancy
amid misinformation, dwindling trust in governments and political
polarisation, UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, said.
"We cannot allow confidence in routine immunizations to become another
victim of the pandemic," Catherine Russell, UNICEF executive director,
said in a statement. "Otherwise, the next wave of deaths could be of
more children with measles, diphtheria or other preventable diseases.”
The change in perception was particularly worrying, the agency said, as
it comes after the largest sustained backslide in childhood immunization
in a generation during COVID disruptions.
In total, 67 million children missed out on one or more potentially
lifesaving vaccines during the pandemic, and efforts to catch up have so
far stalled despite increasing outbreaks.
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A UNICEF logo is pictured outside their
offices in Geneva, Switzerland, January 30, 2017. Picture taken
January 30, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
The picture on vaccine confidence
varied globally, according to the UNICEF report, its flagship annual
State of the World's Children.
In countries including Papua New Guinea and South Korea, agreement
with the statement "vaccines are important for children" declined by
44%, and by more than a third in Ghana, Senegal and Japan. In the
United States, it declined by 13.6 percentage points. In India,
China and Mexico, confidence remained broadly the same or increased,
the report added.
The report stressed that vaccine confidence can easily shift and the
results may not indicate a long-term trend.
Despite the fall in confidence, more than 80% of respondents in
almost half of the countries surveyed still said childhood vaccines
were important.
The data was collected by the Vaccine Confidence Project at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby and Emma Farge; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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