Source: UN News Service
Date: 17 May 2003
Measles campaign in Angola set to
reach record 7.6 million children - UNICEF
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said today it is set to
achieve its ambitious target to vaccinate 7.6 million Angolan
children against measles, making it the biggest health initiative in
the country's history.
UNICEF said more than 5 million children have already been
successfully vaccinated during the first two phases of the National
Measles Campaign launched last 21 April. Data indicates that every
single Angolan boy and girl between the ages of nine months and 15
years -- totalling 7.6 million -- is likely to be protected from
this lethal disease when the campaign ends in a few days, the agency
added.
The success is particularly remarkable as the campaign is
operating under challenging conditions, since 27 years of civil war
left Angola's basic infrastructure in disarray before a peace accord
was signed last year.
"Angola's national measles campaign is complicated by post-war
difficulties of poor access and damaged transportation routes. At a
time when bridges are broken, roads ruined, mines ubiquitous, and
populations on the move, the challenges of the operation cannot be
underestimated," UNICEF Representative Mario Ferrari said.
Around 10,000 Angolan children die each year from measles, with
95 per cent of cases occurring in children below 15 years of age.
"This translates to 30 children dying every day from a disease
that can be readily prevented," Mr. Ferrari stated. "These are the
numbers that must be reversed. And I am happy to say the success of
the National Measles Campaign means that process is now beginning in
Angola," he added.
UNICEF said it is, in collaboration with its partners, currently
reaching the most inaccessible rural areas in the campaign's third
and final phase through the use of military helicopters, personnel
carriers, cargo planes and four-wheel drive vehicles.
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