GENEVA/NEW YORK, 15 July
2020 –
The World Health Organization and UNICEF warned today of an alarming decline in
the number of children receiving life-saving vaccines around the world. This is
due to disruptions in the delivery and uptake of immunization services caused
by the COVID-19 pandemic. According to new
data by WHO and UNICEF, these disruptions threaten to reverse
hard-won progress to reach more children and adolescents with a wider range of
vaccines, which has already been hampered by a decade of stalling coverage.
The latest data on
vaccine coverage estimates from WHO and UNICEF for 2019 shows
that improvements such as the expansion of the HPV vaccine to 106 countries and
greater protection for children against more diseases are in danger of lapsing.
For example, preliminary data for the first four months of 2020 points to a
substantial drop in the number of children completing three doses of the
vaccine against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP3). This is the first
time in 28 years that the world could see a reduction in DTP3 coverage – the
marker for immunization coverage within and across countries.
“Vaccines are one of the
most powerful tools in the history of public health, and more children are now
being immunized than ever before,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO
Director-General. “But the pandemic has put those gains at risk. The avoidable
suffering and death caused by children missing out on routine immunizations
could be far greater than COVID-19 itself. But it doesn’t have to be that way.
Vaccines can be delivered safely even during the pandemic, and we are calling
on countries to ensure these essential life-saving programmes continue.”
COVID-19 disruptions
Due to the COVID-19
pandemic, at least 30 measles vaccination campaigns were or are at risk of
being cancelled, which could result in further outbreaks in 2020 and beyond.
According to a new UNICEF, WHO
and Gavi pulse survey, conducted in collaboration with the US
Centers for Disease Control, the Sabin Vaccine Institute and Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health, three quarters of the 82 countries that
responded reported COVID-19 related disruptions in their immunization programmes
as of May 2020. The reasons for disrupted services vary. Even when services are
offered, people are either unable to access them because of reluctance to leave
home, transport interruptions, economic hardships, restrictions on movement, or
fear of being exposed to people with COVID-19. Many health workers are also
unavailable because of restrictions on travel or redeployment to COVID response
duties as well as a lack of protective equipment.
“COVID-19 has made
previously routine vaccination a daunting challenge,” said UNICEF Executive
Director Henrietta Fore. “We must prevent a further deterioration in vaccine
coverage and urgently resume vaccination programs before children’s lives are
threatened by other diseases. We cannot trade one health crisis for another.”
Stagnating global
coverage rate
Progress on immunization
coverage was stalling before COVID-19 hit, at 85 per cent for
DTP3 and measles vaccines. The likelihood that a child born today will be fully
vaccinated with all the globally recommended vaccines by the time she reaches
the age of 5 is less than 20 per cent.
In 2019, nearly 14
million children missed out on life-saving vaccines such as measles and DTP3.
Most of these children live in Africa and are likely to lack access to other
health services. Two-thirds of them are concentrated in 10 middle- and
low-income countries: Angola, Brazil, Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Philippines.
Children in middle-income countries account for an increasing share of the
burden.
Progress and challenges,
by country and region
There has been some
progress. Regional coverage for the third dose of DTP in South Asia has
increased by 12 percentage points over the last 10 years, notably across India,
Nepal and Pakistan. However, that hard-won progress could be undone by COVID-19
related disruptions. Countries that had recorded significant progress, such as
Ethiopia and Pakistan, are now also at risk of backsliding if immunization
services are not restored as soon as feasible.
The situation is
especially concerning for Latin America and the Caribbean, where historically
high coverage has slipped over the last decade. In Brazil, Bolivia, Haiti and
Venezuela, immunization coverage plummeted by at least 14 percentage points
since 2010. These countries are now also confronting moderate to severe
COVID19-related disruptions.
As the global health
community attempts to recover lost ground due to COVID-19 related disruptions,
UNICEF and WHO are
supporting countries in their efforts to reimagine immunization and build back
better by:
Notes to editors Download
photos, the report, data files and b-roll from UNICEF here or from WHO here. After 2pm CET 15 July, read the
analysis of the data in this report, Are we losing
ground? or browse the full vaccine coverage datasets from UNICEF or
at WHO’s webpage.
Review presentation and graphs related to the data here.
About the data
2019
IMMUNIZATION COVERAGE ESTIMATES
Every year, UNICEF and
the World Health Organization (WHO) produce a new round of immunization
coverage estimates for 195 countries, enabling a critical assessment of how
well we are doing in reaching every child with life-saving vaccines. In
addition to producing the immunization coverage estimates for 2019, the WHO and
UNICEF estimation process revises the entire historical series of immunization
data with the latest available information. The 2019 revision covers 39 years
of coverage estimates, from 1980 to 2019. DTP3 coverage is used as an indicator
to assess the proportion of children vaccinated and is calculated for children
under one year of age. The estimated number of vaccinated children are
calculated using population data provided by the 2019 World Population
Prospects (WPP) from the UN.
IMMUNIZATION
PULSE SURVEY, JUNE 2020
The new UNICEF, WHO and
Gavi pulse survey was conducted in collaboration with US Centers for Disease
Control, the Sabin Vaccine Institute and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health, in June 2020. Respondents from 82 countries, including 14 with
lower than 80 per cent vaccination coverage rates in 2019, reported on
disruptions in immunization services due to COVID-19 as of May 2020. The
online immunization pulse survey received responses from 260 immunization
experts, including representatives of Ministries of Health, academia and global
health organizations across 82 countries. A previous pulse poll, conducted in
April received 801 responses from 107 countries, showed that disruption to the
routine immunization programs were already widespread and affected all regions.
64 per cent of countries represented in that poll indicated that routine
immunizations had been disrupted or even suspended.
The World Health
Organization provides global leadership in public health within the
United Nations system. Founded in 1948, WHO works with 194 Member States,
across six regions and from more than 150 offices, to promote health, keep
the world safe and serve the vulnerable. Our goal for 2019-2023 is to ensure
that a billion more people have universal health coverage, to protect a billion
more people from health emergencies, and provide a further billion people with
better health and wellbeing. For updates on COVID-19 and public health advice
to protect yourself from coronavirus, visit www.who.int and follow WHO on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Pinterest, Snapchat, YouTube.
More on vaccines and
immunization
Guiding principles
for immunization activities during the COVID-19
How WHO is
supporting ongoing vaccination efforts during the COVID-19 pandemic
The vaccines
success story gives us hope for the future
UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the
world’s most disadvantaged children. Across 190 countries and territories, we
work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For
more information about UNICEF and its work for children, visit www.unicef.org. For more information
about COVID-19, visit www.unicef.org/coronavirus. Information on UNICEF’s
Immunization programme, available here. Follow UNICEF on Twitter and Facebook.