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Mozambique Vaccinates to Reduce Measles Deaths

Over the next five days, the African nation will vaccinate 3.6 million children in a bid to reduce measles deaths by 98 percent.

Sun May 22, 2011 04:50 PM ET
Content provided by AFP
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THE GIST
  • The effort is part of a World Health Organization (WHO) goal to reduce 46 sub-Saharan countries' measles deaths by 98 percent.
  • Mozambique, one of the world's poorest nations, is set to be the first to reach this goal by the end of 2012.
As one of the world's poorest countries, Mozambique has improved measles immunization to cover 74.1 percent of the population.

As one of the world's poorest countries, Mozambique has improved measles immunization to cover 74.1 percent of the population. Click to enlarge this image.
Corbis

Mozambique plans to vaccinate 3.6 million children against measles over the next five days in a bid to reduce deaths by 98 percent by the end of 2012, a UN official said Sunday.

This will bring the southern African country closer to a World Health Organization (WHO) goal signed by 46 sub-Saharan countries to reduce measles deaths by 98 percent.

"This campaign has put Mozambique in a position to be the first sub-Saharan African country to reach the 2012 goal," said Andrea Gay, executive director for children's health at the UN Foundation.

Health officials across the country will vaccinate children under five years from Monday to Friday in a $4.5 million (three-million-euro) campaign.

Representatives of the WHO, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and former US senator Bob Bennett inspected preparations at the Marracuene district hospital outside the Mozambican capital Maputo before the start of the campaign.

One of the world's poorest countries, Mozambique has improved measles immunization to cover 74.1 percent of the population.

"On a global scale we can eradicate measles by 2020," said Gay.

Increased vaccination campaigns in Mozambique helped reduce the number of infections an outbreak in 2010, according to a statement by UNICEF and WHO.

The country recorded 434 cases, down from 197,000 cases in 2007.

"It is very rare for doctors to find cases of measles in Mozambique nowadays", Health Minister Paulo Ivo Garridohe told state news agency AIM.

The country of 22.1 million people is prone to flooding and access to medical care is limited.

Tags: Africa, Diseases and Conditions, Health, Health and Illness, Vaccine

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