A shortage of syringes is hampering
plans to vaccinate people in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) against a
yellow fever epidemic despite the arrival of more than one million doses of
vaccine, health officials said yesterday.
Congo’s government declared a yellow
fever epidemic last month in the capital, Kinshasa and two other provinces near
the border with Angola.
The World Health Organisation (WHO)
says some 1,400 suspected cases of the hemorrhagic virus in Congo have resulted
so far in 82 deaths and is particularly concerned about conditions in Kinshasa,
a city of 12 million with poor health services and a climate conducive to
mosquitoes.
The disease has killed 350 people in Angola since December.
The WHO plans to begin a vaccination
campaign in the province of Kwango near the Angolan border on July 20 but the
United Nations (UN) body’s spokesman in Congo, Eugene Kabambi, said the country
had only about four million syringes but needed 10 million.
Kabambi said some 1.08 million vaccine
doses had arrived in Kinshasa in recent days, but declined to say when he
thought more syringes might be delivered.
Health officials are reluctant to
begin the vaccination campaign in only one zone in densely-populated Kinshasa
for reasons of public safety and order.
“If we only organise in Kisenso, there
will be huge crowds coming to Kisenso to obtain the vaccine and that could
become unmanageable,” Kabambi said, referring to the first zone officials plan
to target in the capital city. “So we’re going to wait a little to obtain more
(syringes).”
The global stockpile of yellow fever
vaccine stands at about six million doses after having been depleted twice this
year to immunise people in Angola, Uganda and Congo. The current method for
making vaccines, using chicken eggs, takes a year.
Health officials plan to administer a
fifth of the standard dose in Kinshasa due to the shortage of the vaccine. The
lower dosage provides temporary protection against the disease but does not
confer life-long immunity.
More than one million people were
vaccinated in Kinshasa during a campaign from May 26 to June 4 in two health
zones. But the effort was hampered by disorganisation as residents of other
districts flocked to the vaccination sites, preventing many local residents
from receiving the injection.
Kabambi said other regions along the
Angolan border would eventually be vaccinated, depending on how many more doses
are made available, in order to create an “immune buffer”.
Source: Guardians Newspaper.
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