Credit: GAVI Alliance |
The Republic of the Congo has taken an important step to improve
childrens health by introducing a new vaccine against pneumonia free of
charge, the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) announced today. Original Article to follow from UN news center (2012).
On the 1st of October 2012 – The Republic of the Congo has taken an important
step to improve children’s health by introducing a new vaccine against
pneumonia free of charge, the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) announced today. “Thanks to this new vaccine, Congo can save the lives of numerous young
children who die each year because of the pneumococcal infection”, said
the UNICEF Representative in the country, Marianne Flach, at the
vaccine’s launch ceremony in Brazzaville.
Each year, pneumonia kills virtually half of all African children under
the age of five years, according to UNICEF. In Congo, the disease
represents roughly 14 per cent of child mortality, which makes it the
second cause of mortality in this age range after malaria.
Congo is the 15th country in sub-Saharan Africa to introduce the
pneumococcal vaccine in its Expanded Program on Immunization, which aims
to build on the success of the global smallpox eradication programme,
and to ensure that all children in all countries benefited from
life-saving vaccines.
The pneumococcal vaccine is available in Congo thanks to funds donated
by the GAVI Alliance, a public-private partnership that includes UNICEF,
the World Health Organization (WHO) and civil society, among others.
Since its establishment in 2000, the GAVI Alliance has financed the
immunization of more than 325 million children and prevented more than
five million premature deaths. Through its Advanced Market Commitment
(AMC), the Alliance provides incentives for manufacturers to produce
large quantities of pneumococcal vaccine that can then reach developing
countries much earlier than they could have previously.
“The introduction of the pneumococcal vaccine will be supported by the
implementation of medical sample control sites and the impact evaluation
of these new vaccines’ introduction,” said the WHO Representative in
Congo, Youssouf Gamatié.
In a news release, UNICEF stated the introduction of the vaccine
represents a “major public health intervention” that will eradicate one
of the most fatal childhood diseases with a routine vaccination, adding
that the active engagement of the Congolese community in favoring
immunization for their children will be essential for improving child
health and survival.
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