Vietnam To Ramp Up Vaccination Amid High Risk Of Importing Wild Polio Virus

Vietnam To Ramp Up Vaccination Amid High Risk Of Importing Wild Polio Virus

HANOI, Apr 11 (NNN-VNA) – Vietnam is accelerating efforts to vaccinate children against polio, amid a global surge in a variant of the poliovirus, it was reported today.

The National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, has urged local health authorities to administer polio vaccinations to children, especially those born in 2021 and 2022, the two years when the COVID-19 pandemic occurred.

As a result of social distancing practices, to limit the spread of COVID-19, childhood immunisation rates for polio have dropped to the lowest level in the past 20 years, putting millions of children at risk of exposure to the preventable disease, said the epidemiology institute, under the Ministry of Health.

Vietnam uses two types of the vaccine in the fight to eradicate polio, oral polio vaccine (OPV) and inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) given as a shot in the leg or arm.

Only 69.4 percent of minors as young as two months old received the oral polio vaccine, and 80.4 percent of eligible five-month-olds got injections of the vaccine in 2021.

The inoculation rates rose in 2022 to 70.1 percent for oral vaccine and 89.2 percent for inactivated poliovirus vaccine, said the health ministry.

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), recorded the largest decline in childhood vaccinations in approximately 30 years, in a report published in Jul, 2022, which revealed that 52 out of 63 provinces in Vietnam had failed to meet the required target of reaching 90 percent of children below one year old receiving all recommended routine vaccines.

The World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Regional Commission for the Certification of Poliomyelitis Eradication in the Western Pacific, late last year moved Vietnam from the list of low-risk countries to the list of countries at high risk of importing wild polio.

Vietnam was certified polio-free by the WHO in Oct, 2000.

The country managed to implement the Expanded Programme on Immunisation nationwide since 1985. According to UNICEF, it has successfully eradicated polio, eliminated neonatal tetanus, and controlled measles.– NNN-VNA

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