Health
International Group Funds Vaccines For Children
The GAVI international immunisations group said yesterday that it had agreed more than 50 new deals to fund potentially life-saving vaccines for children in 37 developing countries.
The Geneva-based Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation said the agreements, which will help provide rotavirus, pneumococcal and other vaccines for children under five, were a big step in the fight against the two leading child killers, severe diarrhoea and pneumonia.
Rotavirus shots made by various drug firms such as GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Sanofi-Aventis are part of routine childhood vaccinations in many wealthier nations and recent studies from the U.S., Australia, El Salvador and Mexico showed swift falls in the number of children becoming ill with the virus.
In 2009, the World Health Organisation said all countries should include rotavirus shots in national vaccination programmes, but many poorer nations struggle to afford them.
GAVI said its rollout of rotavirus vaccines in Africa had started, in Sudan, and the agreements meant funding will now be available for these shots to go to children in 12 more African countries.
GAVI said it had also agreed funding for 18 more countries to introduce pneumococcal vaccines, 12 of them in Africa and for other types of vaccines, including measles, meningitis and pentavalent shots, in several other countries.
Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe diarrhoea in children under five, killing more than 500,000 children each year worldwide and causing illness in several million more.
Nearly 50 per cent of all rotavirus deaths are in Africa.
Pneumococcal disease causes pneumonia, meningitis and sepsis and also kills more than 500,000 children each year worldwide, the vast majority of them in Africa and Asia.
“These new vaccines will prevent millions of children from dying of pneumonia and diarrhoea,”said Anthony Lake, executive director of the UN children’s fund UNICEF.
“It is among the most vulnerable that these vaccines can make the biggest difference, especially if they are combined with better nutrition, sanitation and other critical interventions.”
At its latest funding round in June, GAVI — a public-private partnership set up in 2000 to speed the introduction of vaccines into the world’s poorest countries won pledges of 4.3 billion dollars from international donors.