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Measles in nearly half of country's districts
IRIN News
Feb
22, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=88199
A measles outbreak has
hit 28 of Zimbabwe's 62 districts and is still spreading, but efforts
to vaccinate people in some quarters is being hampered by religious
convictions.
According to
the latest World health Organisation (WHO) Epidemiological Bulletin,
"Nearly 1,200 suspected cases were reported since the start
of the outbreak in October 2009,... 221 cases have been confirmed,...
50 community deaths have been reported."
The United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF) as well as other organizations in the health sector
have embarked on an intensive vaccination programme. "The campaign
is targeting all children between the ages of six months and 14
years," UNICEF's Zimbabwe spokesperson, Micaela Marques de
Sousa, told IRIN. In eastern Zimbabwe, in the Buhera district of
Manicaland Province alone, more than 25,000 children had been vaccinated
against measles.
"We are also embarking
on door to door campaigns to emphasize the importance of vaccinating
children," she said, although the strategy is likely to meet
with stiff resistance among those who refuse vaccinations based
on their religious beliefs.
"While we as UNICEF
respect the faith of the apostolic churches, we have also been engaging
them to understand the value of vaccination. We have been engaging
communities on the importance of protecting the rights of the children
and to ensure that they access health services. Even children who
have been vaccinated in the past are being revaccinated because
of the exposure to the measles outbreak."
A large-scale measles
outbreak has occurred among family members of the Johanne Marange
Apostolic Church in the Nzvimbe area, about 70km from the city of
Mutare, near the Mozambique border, according to local media reports.
The church's elders do not allow vaccinations or permit followers
to seek medical treatment, and prefer such measures as sprinkling
holy water on the sick.
Religious
convictions
The reports said 30 people
belonging to the religious group, mainly children, had died from
measles, although the number could be higher because of Vapostori
- the practice of "fast-tracking" burials.
A senior official in
Zimbabwe's ministry of health and child welfare, who declined to
be identified, told IRIN: "We are working overtime to come
up with strategies to ensure that the measles outbreak is contained.
In an environment where some parents do not avail health programmes
to their children, it then becomes difficult to contain the outbreak.
"That is why we
are also working on regulations which will make it an offence for
parents or guardians to deny children vaccination against killer
diseases," the official said.
WHO describes measles
as a highly contagious viral disease affecting mostly children,
which can be effectively prevented by immunization. In Zimbabwe,
children receive a first vaccination against measles at the age
of nine months and second inoculation at 18 months.
Symptoms usually
appear about 8 to 12 days after infection and include high fever,
bloodshot eyes, and tiny white spots on the inside of the mouth.
A rash also develops, starting on the face and upper neck and gradually
spreading over the body. Measles cause the deaths of hundreds of
thousands of children in developing countries annually.
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