| 14 Janvier 2017
12 January 2017 - A mass vaccination campaign to protect more than 4  million children (4 766 214) against a measles outbreak in  conflict-affected states in north-eastern Nigeria is planned to start  this week.
 
 The two-week campaign, which starts on 13 January, will target all  children aged from 6 months to 10 years in accessible areas in Borno,  Yobe and Adamawa States.
 
 "This measles vaccination campaign is an emergency intervention to  protect more than 4 million children against a highly contagious and  sometimes deadly disease," says Dr Wondimagegnehu Alemu, WHO  Representative in Nigeria. "Massive disruption to health services in  conflict-affected areas for many years has deprived these children of  essential childhood vaccinations. In addition, many of them have severe  malnutrition, making them extremely vulnerable to serious complications  and death from measles."
 
 Polio programme provides crucial support
 
 WHO is supporting the 3 state Primary Healthcare Development Agencies to  prepare for the campaign; working with partners including UNICEF, the  United States Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and other health  nongovernmental organizations. WHO is providing expertise in areas  including logistics, data management, training, social mobilization,  monitoring and evaluation, supportive supervision (human resource) and  waste management.
 
 "Nigeria’s well-established polio vaccination programme provides a  strong underpinning for the campaign," says Dr Alemu. "Population data  from the polio programme has been essential to guide planning for the  measles campaign. We are also able to make use of staff that have vast  experience in providing health services in very difficult and risky  areas."
 
 High insecurity, difficult terrain and lack of functioning health  facilities add to the enormous logistical challenges of organizing a  large mass vaccination campaign that requires assembling and training  more than 4000 vaccination teams and ensuring the vaccine is kept within  cold chain conditions (+2⁰ to 8⁰ C) in a climate where average daytime  temperatures are above 30⁰ C.
 
 The vaccination teams for this campaign are made up of 7 people  including a supervisor, vaccinators (health workers), record keepers,  community mobilizers and town criers. The teams will also give children  deworming medication and vitamin A supplements at the same time as the  measles vaccination.
 
 To prevent double vaccinations especially in schools and camps for  displaced people, vaccination cards will be issued to all vaccinated  children as well as the use of pen markers to mark their thumbs.
 
 Earlier campaigns show results
 
 From early September to 18 December 2016, WHO-established Early Warning,  Alert and Response System (EWARS) reported more than 1500 suspected  measles cases in Borno State. More than 77% of children aged less than 5  years in Borno State have never received the measles vaccine and this  is the age group where most cases have occurred.
 
 The Borno State Ministry of Health, with support from WHO and partners,  has already vaccinated more than 83 000 children aged 6 months to 15  years living in camps for IDPs (internally displaced people) where  measles cases had been reported. These campaigns have started to show  results, with a reduction of measles cases around the camps.
 
 Children have missed out on essential vaccinations
 
 The humanitarian crisis caused by conflict in Borno State has resulted  in more than 1.4 million IDPs living in more than 100 camps, amongst a  host population of about 4.3 million people.
 
 With levels of malnutrition as high as 20% in some populations in Borno  State, these children are particularly vulnerable to diseases like  measles, malaria, respiratory infections and diarrhoea. The combination  of malnutrition, malaria and measles increased child deaths up to 4  times higher than what is considered the emergency threshold (8 deaths  per 10 000 children aged under 5 years per day).
 
 Measles is a highly contagious, serious disease that is one of the  leading causes of death in young children. In 2015, there were more than  134 000 measles deaths globally; most of them were in children aged  less than 5 years.
 
 During 2000-2015, measles vaccination prevented an estimated 20.3  million deaths making measles vaccination one of the best buys in public  health.
http://www.who.int/features/2017/measles-vaccination-nigeria/en/
 More about Nigeria crisis:
 http://www.who.int/emergencies/nigeria/en/









