“We were obliged to delay for weeks the immunisation campaign since security issues forced our volunteers to wait for a safer period,” Ahmed Obeid, press officer in the Ministry of Health, said. “But we hope this time to reach a 100 percent immunisation in Iraq.”
Launched on Sunday and ending on Thursday, the campaign involves more than 5,400 health workers. They are going house-to-house across Iraq to immunise every child under five against polio.
“The situation is critical and because of insurgency in Iraq security concerns over children have delayed what is a serious matter. In addition, 69 percent of the population has no access to drinking water and 19 percent has no sewage access, making the health of those children more vulnerable to diseases,” Obaid said.
Obaid added that while general security in Iraq has not got any better over the past couple of months, an awareness campaign of the vaccination programme had gained assurances from tribal chiefs that vaccinators would not be targeted.
The campaign will help to maintain Iraq’s polio-free status, a public health triumph for children won through several successful immunisation drives in the past. Iraq’s last polio case was reported in 2000.
According to medical staff in the Ministry of Health, the nearly 250,000 children who were born after 2003 in Iraq have not had polio immunisation.
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is providing oral polio vaccines for the campaign as well as transport and communication support to help vaccinators reach children in Iraq’s most remote and insecure areas.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has provided vital assistance to the Iraqi government for planning the campaign, training local health staff and providing incentives for vaccinators.
WHO states that polio is a highly infectious and incurable communicable disease that can cause lifelong paralysis. Most of its victims are children under five years old.
Although polio has been driven out of Iraq, a recent global resurgence of the virus has brought a renewed threat to the region. Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Sudan have all been re-infected since 2004, making this week’s campaign vital to safeguard Iraq’s children.
as/ed
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions