Annual African Vaccination Week (AVW) 2016

Annual African Vaccination Week (AVW) 2016

A Call to Close the Immunization Gap

Windhoek,  28 April 2016 – The sixth African Vaccination Week (AVW) has been launched in Ganta, Nimba County of Liberia, on 25 April 2016 in the presence of high level officials and respected community leaders. The AVW is commemorated by African Countries during the week of 24–30 April 2016 with the theme, “Close the Immunization Gap. Stay Polio Free.”

This year’s theme draws attention to the need to attain universal immunization coverage in Africa, while celebrating the important polio eradication milestone that has been reached. It calls on countries, governments, communities, families and individuals to take action to close the immunization gap and ensure that every child, woman and man gets vaccinated against vaccine-preventable diseases.  In 2014, only 18 African countries had achieved 90% coverage, and to date one in five children in Africa do not receive all the basic vaccines they need. 

Close the Immunization Gap. Stay Polio Free, the theme for this year’s AVW campaign, also calls on governments to plan for and finance immunization activities, for communities to encourage each other to get immunized, and families and individuals to actively seek vaccination services for themselves and their children.  It also signals a reminder that countries need to remain vigilant to ensure they stay polio free, while they transition the huge polio assets acquired over the past couple of decades to further strengthen their routine immunization and other child survival programs.  

“As we commemorate the sixth edition of the African Vaccination Week, I call on all countries and partners to sustain and strengthen the gains made in immunization coverage,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa.  “We have come a long way, but we are not yet where we need to be – countries need to act on the commitments made to close the immunization gap at the Addis Ababa Ministerial Conference on Immunization earlier this year.”

This year’s AVW coincides with the switch from the use of trivalent oral polio vaccine (tOPV) to bivalent oral polio vaccines (bOPV) in the routine immunization schedules of countries in the Region as agreed by health ministers worldwide during the 68th World Health Assembly in 2015. The switch follows the global eradication of wild poliovirus type 2 as declared by the Global Commission for Certification of Poliovirus Eradication in September 2015. 

WHO Namibia and the Ministry of Health and Social Services will celebrate AVW 2016 with health promotion activities, media advocacy, provision of vaccinations, de-worming, vitamin A supplementation and other child and maternal health services at health facilities. All public health centres and clinics nationwide will participate. Parents, caregivers and family members can take their children to any public health centre or clinic closest to their place of residence to benefit from these health interventions. Parents must bring their own and their child’s health passport.

This year’s commemoration is the sixth of its kind, when countries in the African Region join the rest of the world in commemorating World Immunization Week. The event, which takes place in the last week of April, promotes the use of vaccines to protect people of all ages against disease. Immunization saves millions of lives and is widely recognized as one of the world’s most successful and cost-effective health interventions.

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For further information, please contact:

Celia Kaunatjike, Health Promotion Officer, Tel: +26461-255-191 / Cell: +264-81-64 98 569.