| 02 Septembre 2016
 Geneva, 2 September 2016 – A major part of the largest emergency  vaccination campaign against yellow fever ever attempted in Africa has  been completed, with more than 7.7 million people vaccinated in record  time in the city of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Geneva, 2 September 2016 – A major part of the largest emergency  vaccination campaign against yellow fever ever attempted in Africa has  been completed, with more than 7.7 million people vaccinated in record  time in the city of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).In less than two weeks, the campaign successfully reached the targeted population of Kinshasa, most of them (7.3 million people) using an emergency vaccine – one fifth of the full dose of yellow fever vaccine. This dose sparing strategy was recommended by the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) as a short-term emergency measure to reach as many people as possible given limited supplies of the vaccine.Â
“WHO commends the Government of the DRC for this significant achievement to roll out such a complex campaign in such a short period of time,” said Dr Yokouide Allarangar, WHO Representative in the DRC.
Planning a mass vaccination campaign on this scale usually takes up to 6 months. This complex and ambitious emergency campaign was put in place in a matter of weeks to end transmission of yellow fever before the rainy season starts in September.
The dose sparing strategy required the purchase and shipment of 10 million specialized syringes as well as specific training of more than 40 000 vaccinators to use this new method.
The Ministry of Public Health, WHO and more than 50 global partners, worked closely together through the complex planning and logistics needed to roll out the campaign in more than 8000 locations across the country – both in dense, urban areas and in hard-to-reach, remote border regions.
WHO played a key role in ensuring technical soundness and feasibility of the strategy, the availability of millions of vaccine doses, syringes and other materials, as well as maintaining the cold chain to ensure vaccines are stored and transported in the right conditions. Together with national health authorities, WHO led the coordination efforts during the planning and implementation phases of the campaign, trained health workers and engaged with communities and leaders in disseminating information about the campaigns.
 UNICEF helped to ensure that vaccines and injection devices were in  place and led social mobilizers on the ground to engage with communities  and encourage people to get vaccinated. World Food Programme (WFP) was a  key logistics partner in providing temporary safe storage of the huge  volumes of waste generated by this campaign that will be sent for  incineration in mid-September.
 
 Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) mobilized 200 staff from 20 countries to  manage the vaccination of over 710 000 people in three health zones in  Kinshasa in collaboration with Ministry of Health staff, including  training of the vaccination teams, supervision, logistic support, waste  and cold chain management.
 
 The Red Cross of the Democratic Republic of Congo, supported by the  International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,  mobilized thousands of volunteers across affected areas to promote and  support the campaign and share yellow fever prevention and protection  information.
 Save the Children deployed a team of specialists from their Emergency  Health Unit to provide technical and operational support to the Ministry  of Public Health in Binza Ozone health zone. The team, with help from  national staff, assisted the Ministry to vaccinate more than 360 000  people, more than half of them children.
 
 The US Centers for Disease Control  (CDC) has supported the  international response and vaccination campaigns, deploying more than 45  experts to support these efforts since February 2016, in roles  including: Incident Manager in Angola, Response Team Leads, Emergency  Management Specialist, Laboratory experts, Public Health Advisors,  Vaccine Specialists, Communications Specialists and Epidemiologists. CDC  is also working with the Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale  (INRB) in DRC to support the dose sparing approach used in the Kinshasa  campaign, including facilitating an evaluation of the immune response it  provides. This study, funded by USAID,  will help provide more  information and inform decisions on future use of this method for yellow  fever vaccination.
 
 Through its US$ 20.3 million contribution to the global yellow fever  vaccine stockpile, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, has supported the  majority of vaccine doses used in DRC and Angola outbreak response.  Overall Gavi has contributed 16.5 million vaccine doses to the stockpile  this year. Additionally, the Vaccine Alliance is providing US$ 8.7  million to support the operational costs of the campaign in DRC.
 
 The World Bank provided US$ 3 million to co-finance the yellow fever  vaccines as well as other services needed as part of the overall plan  prepared by the Government. The World Bank also has contributed US $5  million to the Government of Angola to finance the yellow fever  vaccination programme in the country.
 
 On 16 August, the Government of DRC launched the vaccination campaign in  Kinshasa with the goal to vaccinate 7.5 million people within 2 weeks  in order to interrupt viral circulation and prevent the outbreak from  escalating.. From the first day and throughout the campaign, thousands  of people have been turning up to get vaccinated at posts across the  huge city. By 28 August, the Government reported that 7.7 million people  had been vaccinated in the capital city, and a further 1.5 million  people in DRC's border regions with Angola.  Of the 7.7 million people  vaccinated in Kinshasa, around 400 000 pregnant women and babies  received the full dose under SAGE recommendations.
 
 Over the next few weeks, vaccination teams will focus on completing the  campaign in remote border regions and reaching people at risk who may  have missed out on vaccination the first time around. In Angola,  vaccination campaigns are ongoing, with an estimated 3 million people  vaccinated since mid-August.
 
 This latest campaign that aims at prevention builds on previous  emergency yellow fever reactive vaccination campaigns that have already  reached more than 13 million people in Angola and more than 3 million in  DRC since the beginning of the outbreak in December 2015.
 
 Since the beginning of this year, almost 1000 people in both countries  have had confirmed yellow fever, with many more suspected cases and more  than 400 deaths reported. 
 
 The yellow fever outbreak in both countries appears to be declining – no  new cases have been confirmed in either country for over a month –  However, given that there may still be viral circulation in the mosquito  vector, and in other animal reservoirs, and in anticipation of the  upcoming rainy season that will result in increased risk of  transmission, it is critical to continue to provide support to ensure  the countries have the capacity to detect and respond to any further  cases of yellow fever.









