Niger Delta

Mrs Sylva Wants Pneumonia Immunisation Programmes

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The first lady of Bayelsa State and Wife of Governor Timpre Sylva, Mrs. Alanyingi Sylva, has stressed the need for inclusion of vaccination against pneumonia in the National Immunisation Programme (NPI).

Mrs. Sylva said this has become necessary as a way  to achieve a reduction in the number of child deaths resulting from pneumonia.  

She contended that in order to save venerable children to diseases, the vaccines had to  be administered to those under the age of two to five.

Speaking during a round table discussion  with doctors and community health workers on child survival in her office as part of activities to mark the World Pneumonia Day in Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa State, the governor’s wife disclosed that she had discussed with the wife of the President, Dame Patience Jonathan on the need to make the vaccines available for the benefit of children in the country.

According to her, chairmen of local government councils and community health workers should also be actively involved in the fight against pneumonia and other preventable diseases.

In their separate submissions, a consultant paediatrician and Chief Medical Director of the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital, Okolobiri, Dr Onyaye Kunle-Olowu and Provost, College of Health Sciences, Niger Delta University, Prof. Raphael Oruamabo, emphasized the need for children to be protected against pneumonia.

Kunle-Olowu and Oruamabo listed illiteracy, poverty and lack of access to treatment as some of the factors aiding the prevalence of the disease which, they noted, was the number one preventable child killer-disease.

The state Commissioner for Health, Azibapu Eruani, commended Mrs. Sylva for creating awareness about the danger of pneumonia and other child killer- diseases.

Eruani advised all stakeholders to ensure child survival by avoiding the causes of diseases especially pneumonia.

The Account Manager of Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, Mrs. Cassandra Anagboso, explained that the Pneumococcal Conjugal Vaccine (PCV) developed for the vaccination of children below the age of five against pneumonia had been found to be very effective.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Sylva has embarked on a walk against pneumonia with doctors, mothers, school children, market women and women from all walks of life to create awareness about the disease.

Addressing the participants at the end of the walk at the Peace Park, Yenagoa, Mrs. Sylva said she believed every child should live a healthy life, noting that the World Pneumonia Day was set aside to create awareness about pneumonia and the danger it posed to the lives and health of children.

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