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Polio
the target as 2 million Zimbabwean children are vaccinated by Health
Campaign
UNICEF
June 06, 2007
Two million Zimbabwean
children are currently being reached in the country's critical
Child Health Days. All will receive a polio vaccination.
The campaign, which was
launched on Monday, is "on track to meet its bold targets
and is vital for child survival amid the challenges in Zimbabwe
today", said UNICEF's Representative in Zimbabwe, Dr
Festo Kavishe.
Now a permanent feature
on the health calendar, the Child Health Days seek to reach every
corner of the country and every child under five through routine
immunization and Vitamin "A" supplements.
Spearheaded by Government
in partnership with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF),
the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Helen Keller Foundation,
this year's focus is on eradicating polio. The campaign will
see all under-five children receive the first round of polio vaccinations,
in a two-phase national immunisation campaign.
"Massive efforts
by Government, dedicated health workers and communities meant Zimbabwe
was declared polio free in 1999," said UNICEF's Kavishe.
"Yet the threat of polio remains very real, with recent cases
in Botswana and Namibia.
"This week-long
campaign, with essential funding from the UK's Department
for International Development (DFID), Canada's International
Development Agency (CIDA) and the Government of Ireland, is a critical
boost to health services that are under great stress in Zimbabwe,"
added Kavishe.
The Child Health Days
initiative is an intensive campaign with US$1 million spent on vaccines,
logistics and staff time. Hundreds of health workers and volunteers
have been trained and supported by the Ministry of Health and Child
Welfare and UNICEF. Public health facilities, schools and churches
have become immunisation centres, as children are protected against
tuberculosis, measles, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, hepatitis
B and polio, and receive Vitamin A supplementation.
Past child health drives
in Zimbabwe have proven the campaign-method is highly successful.
Recent campaigns have boosted Vitamin A coverage from less than
10% in 2005 to over 80% today. Overall immunisation coverage, which
had dropped by almost 50%, has once again reached more than 70%.
The Ministry of Health and Child Welfare has also recorded a decline
in measles and malaria cases. Much of these successes are due to
the determination of neighborhood health committees and religious
and traditional leaders who have been at the forefront of encouraging
mothers to bring their children for vaccination.
With donor assistance
from the UK and Japan, UNICEF provides support to the Zimbabwe Expanded
Programme on Immunisation (ZEPI) and procures all vaccines for immunisation,
cold chain equipment for vaccine storage and technical support to
the health workers.
"These nationwide
campaigns are the single most important support towards reducing
child illnesses and deaths in Zimbabwe," said UNICEF's
Head of Health in Zimbabwe, Dr Colleta Kibassa. "However,
past successes have to be maintained and built upon. Our aim must
remain to reach all of Zimbabwe's children."
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