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Introduction:
The world is facing multiple health challenges.
These range from outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles and diphtheria, increasing reports of drug-resistant pathogens, growing rates of obesity and physical inactivity to the health impacts of environmental pollution and climate change and multiple humanitarian crises.
The threat from vaccine hesitancy, which is defined as the “reluctance or refusal to vaccinate despite the availability of vaccines”, only appears to have grown more dangerous to public health.
There has been a sharp increase in the WHO European region too with 90,000 cases recorded in the first six months that more than the numbers recorded for the whole of 2018.
The measles infection spread in the European region has been unprecedented in recent years that around 1,74,000 cases from 49 of the 53 countries between January 2018 and June 2019.
Last month the U.K., Greece, the Czech Republic and Albania lost their measles elimination status.
About Measles Infection:
With a 30% increase in measles cases worldwide in 2018, the World Health Organization, in January 2019, included ‘vaccine hesitancy’ as one of the 10 threats to global health.
Vaccine Hesitancy: A generation at risk:
India has fourth highest number of measles cases in the world: WHO
India has taken several initiatives to protect its children and has made significant progress in decreasing measles incidence and related mortality and morbidity.
However, Children under the age of one get infected by the virus the most in India as they have the highest incidence rate of 76.4 per million population, according to WHO.
Moreover, this is the same age bracket that has received highest number of zero doses of measles vaccination between July 2018 and June 2019.
After a surge in measles cases in 2018, there have been around 3,65,000 measles cases reported from 182 countries in the first six months of 2019.
The biggest increase, of 900% in the first six months this year compared with the same period last year, has been from the WHO African region, with the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Madagascar and Nigeria accounting for most cases.
Misinformation need to be Addressed:
Conclusion:
Paediatricians and family doctors have a key role in helping parents appreciate the benefits of vaccination.
Physicians advice has been shown to be the most important predictor of vaccine acceptance.
All child health workers must promote vaccination conflicting advice from medical professionals is especially damaging and must be afforded sufficient time with each family to effectively do so.
Increasing and maintaining vaccination uptake is vital for vaccines to achieve their success.
Governments and Health policy makers also play an essential role in promoting vaccination, educating the general public, and implementing policies that reduce the public health risks associated with vaccine hesitancy.
Addressing low vaccination requires an adequate understanding of the determinants of the problem, tailored evidence-based strategies to improve uptake, and monitoring and evaluation to determine the impact and sustainability of the interventions.
Only a collaborative effort between paediatricians, family doctors, parents, public health officials, governments, the technology sector, and civil society will allow myths and misinformation around vaccination to be dispelled.
By: Priyank Kishore ProfileResourcesReport error
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