© IRIN
Millions of children will benefit from the effort
ISLAMABAD, - Pakistan, suffering from a high
incidence of hepatitis B, has launched a nationwide vaccination
campaign for children up to one year of age with international help.
"The hepatitis B vaccination has been included in the national
immunisation programme," Dr Rehan Hafiz, national programme manager
of the country's expanded programme on immunisation, told IRIN on
Wednesday in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. The programme is
supported by the World Health Organisation and UNICEF and has been
launched across the country this year.
Hepatitis B affects an estimated one out of every 10 Pakistanis,
though some medical experts feel that its incidence is much higher.
Hafiz said some surveys showed the incidence of the disease to be
anywhere from two percent to 10 percent - this high magnitude
meriting a national response.
However, due to a shortage of funds, the government has planned to
target the youngest segment of the population. It started the first
phase of the programme last year by vaccinating children less than a
year old in just 11 of Pakistan's 100 districts.
Hafiz said the programme was launched with the material support of
the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI), which is
financially supported by the Bill and Melida Gates Foundation. The
US-based group has made financial commitments to the tune of US $750
million for the global vaccination programme, an official of the
foundation told IRIN.
Hafiz said GAVI has already provided close to 15.5 million doses of
the vaccine, which is extremely expensive on the local market. "Our
aim is to immunise every new born child eventually," he noted.
By the end of the year 2005, Pakistan will get 81.093 million doses
from GAVI, immunising more than 21 million children.
The three doses per child are administered at the age of six weeks,
10 weeks and 14 weeks, along with the three polio vaccinations.
Hafiz said Pakistan's fight against polio - though slower than some
neighbouring countries - was showing signs of success.
"We are down to 25 cases of polio across the country from 117 cases
last year and 199 cases a year before that," Hafiz said, explaining
that in some areas there had not been a single case of polio in the
last four years.
According to medical experts, of the 130 million children born in
the world each year - one in four - do not receive any immunisation.
Three million of these children will die at some point in their
lives from a vaccine-preventable disease. The lack of immunisation
alone results in the death of about 8,000 children around the world
every day.
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