African countries warned to continue its vaccination for malaria, polio

The World Health Organisation (WHO) is supporting countries in all aspects of the Covid-19 response. It recently published guidelines for ensuring the continuation of critical health services, including immunisation and anti-malaria campaigns. The guidelines stress the need for countries to take a dynamic approach that mitigates any unavoidable pause in vaccination campaigns.

Public health systems in Africa are coming under severe strain as the unprecedented Covid-19 pandemic persists. But as countries battle to bring the outbreak under control, efforts must also be maintained on other health emergencies and progress made against diseases such as malaria or polio preserved, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said yesterday.

Prior to the arrival of the novel coronavirus in Africa, WHO was stressing the need for countries to ensure the continuity of routine essential health services. An overburdened health system not only undermines the effectiveness of the response to Covid-19 but may also undermine the response to a whole host of preventable threats to human health. Even brief interruptions of vaccination make outbreaks more likely to occur, putting children and other vulnerable groups more at risk of life-threatening diseases.

“I urge all countries to not lose focus on their gains made in health as they adapt to tackle this new threat,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa. “We saw with the ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa that we lost more people to malaria, for instance than, we lost to the ebola outbreak. Let us not repeat that with Covid-19.”

WHO is supporting countries in all aspects of the Covid-19 response and has recently published guidelines for ensuring the continuation of critical health services, including immunisation and anti-malaria campaigns. The guidelines stress the need for countries to take a dynamic approach that mitigates any unavoidable pause in vaccination campaigns.

“Africa has made significant progress over the past 20 years in stopping malaria from claiming lives. While Covid-19 is a major health threat, it’s critical to maintain malaria prevention and treatment programmes. The new modelling shows deaths could exceed 700 000 this year alone. We haven’t seen mortality levels like that in 20 years. We must not turn back the clock,” said Dr Moeti.

There are countries like Benin, the DRC, Sierra Leone, Chad, Central African Republic, Uganda and Tanzania which are continuing with their insecticide treated bed net campaigns and other important malaria prevention activities. Countries are adapting their malaria strategies to the current complex situation.

Another essential health service is immunisation. The response to Covid-19 has already disrupted vaccination efforts on the continent. Despite considerable progress on immunisation, one in four African children remain under-immunised. Measles vaccination campaigns in Chad, Ethiopia, Nigeria and South Sudan have already been suspended because of Covid-19, leaving approximately 21 million children who would have otherwise been vaccinated, unprotected.


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