Immunising Africa’s children is a worthy goal for the continent

What you need to know:

  • Polio has not been seen anywhere on the continent in more than a year.

  • Because of a new meningitis vaccine, hundreds of millions of people no longer live in fear of this life-threatening infection.

  • When children are vaccinated, they have fewer illnesses, so health care costs are lower for families and the health system.

  • One in five children on the continent does not receive the vaccines he or she needs.

Africa has an incredible opportunity to provide a better life for each and every child — and we know exactly how to seize it: provide universal access to immunisation across the continent to protect them from vaccine-preventable diseases.

We have seen the transformative impact of efforts to reach more children with life-saving vaccines.

Child deaths in Africa fell by half over the past generation, in large part due to the use of high impact interventions such as immunisation.

Polio has not been seen anywhere on the continent in more than a year.

Because of a new meningitis vaccine, hundreds of millions of people no longer live in fear of this life-threatening infection.

IMMUNISATION BENEFITS

The benefits of immunisation extend far beyond health. When children are vaccinated, they have fewer illnesses, so health care costs are lower for families and the health system.

Vaccinated children are more likely to stay in school, strengthening the economic outlook for themselves and their communities.

Immunisation is one of the most cost-effective strategies to improve living standards and put countries on the path to achieve their economic potential.

Unfortunately, far too many children in Africa still miss out on essential immunisation services. One in five children on the continent does not receive the vaccines he or she needs.

Globally, Africa has the lowest level of immunisation coverage of any region: more than half of the world’s unimmunised infants are located in five African countries.

The first-ever Ministerial Conference on Immunisation in Africa, to be held in Addis Ababa on February 24-25, 2016, will represent a remarkable moment.

For the first time, ministers of health, finance, and other sectors from across the continent will come together to declare their commitment to strengthening immunisation services, and put universal access to immunisation at the forefront of efforts to improve health and drive sustainable development. 

The economic benefits of vaccination are clear, yet less than 20 countries in Africa currently fund more than 50 per cent of their own immunisation expenditure.

The generosity of outside donors, particularly over the past decade, has enabled African countries to strengthen immunisation programmes and introduce new vaccines.

While donor support will remain important, as African countries continue to grow economically, our shared goal should be for all governments to fully finance their national immunisation programmes.

COMMUNITY EFFORT

Significantly, the ministers will be joined in Addis by civil society and religious leaders, because reaching children with vaccines requires more than government funding.

Reaching more children also requires that parents understand the value of immunisation and make receiving vaccines a priority for their children.

The entire community should be engaged in planning for immunisation activities so that when health workers arrive to provide vaccines, families show up.

The communities we need to engage the most are the ones that have traditionally been underserved and where health systems are the weakest.

Children whose parents have little or no education or income are among the least likely to receive the vaccines they need.

In poor and remote areas, health systems to deliver vaccines and other basic health services are weak or nonexistent.

We are optimistic that Africa can rise to these challenges, in part because of the success achieved in the fight against polio — government leaders at all levels committed to delivering polio vaccines to all children.

Communities and religious leaders were engaged to build trust among parents. The polio programme focused on reaching every last child in spite of immense challenges, including conflict.

Efforts to stop polio strengthened the infrastructure and expertise needed to reach children with vaccines for all diseases.

Countries that beat back polio have better equipment to keep vaccines cold, more trained health workers, and systems in place to monitor disease spread.

If countries invest in sustaining this infrastructure, they will keep polio out and advance other health priorities.

The benefits of immunisation for Africa have never been clearer, and universal access to immunisation is an achievable goal.

Dr Moeti is the WHO regional director for Africa. Dr Ala Alwan is the WHO regional director for the Eastern Mediterranean.