Newsletter
Contact
Careers
Calendar
RFP
Français
myGAVI
Donate
Home
About the Alliance
Learn more about GAVI
GAVI's mission
What we do
GAVI's impact
Challenges and opportunities
Healthy girls, healthy women
Gender and immunisation
Why invest in GAVI?
Advocates
GAVI's strategy
Value of vaccination
GAVI's partnership model
GAVI's business model
Global health and development
Governing GAVI
GAVI Board
GAVI Secretariat
GAVI Internal Audit
Programmatic and Finance Policies
Corporate Policies
Types of support
What GAVI offers and how it works
Apply for support
New and underused vaccines support
Human papillomavirus vaccine
Injection safety support
Measles second dose
Meningitis A vaccine
Pentavalent vaccine
Pneumococcal vaccine
Measles-Rubella vaccine
Rotavirus vaccine
Yellow fever vaccine
Immunisation services support
Health Systems Funding Platform
Health system strengthening
Civil society organisation
Country hub
Afghanistan
Albania
Angola
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bangladesh
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Central African Republic (the)
Chad
China
Comoros
Congo
Congo, DR
Côte d’Ivoire
Cuba
Djibouti
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gambia
Georgia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
India
Indonesia
Kenya
Kiribati
Korea, DPR
Kyrgyzstan
Lao PDR
Lesotho
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Moldova
Mongolia
Mozambique
Myanmar
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Pakistan
Papua New Guinea
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Sierra Leone
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Sudan
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Tajikistan
Tanzania, UR
Timor Leste
Togo
Turkmenistan
Uganda
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Funding & finance
Long-term financial commitments
How GAVI is funded
Key figures: donor contributions & pledges
Donor profiles
Financial reports
GAVI Matching Fund
How it works
Partners
International Finance Facility for Immunisation
Pneumococcal AMC
Results & evidence
Measuring & evaluating performance
Goal-level indicators
Mission indicators
Vaccine goal indicators
Health systems goal indicators
Financing goal indicators
Market-shaping goal indicators
Countries approved for support
Disbursements by country
GAVI's evaluation studies
GAVI first evaluation report
GAVI second evaluation report
GAVI support to CSO evaluation
GAVI-Government of China Hepatitis B vaccination programme
Gender Policy evaluation
IFFIm evaluation
Pneumococcal AMC process and design
Other studies
GAVI Progress reports
Library & news
Search by topic, country and programme
News
Press releases
Statements
Return on investment stories
GAVI features
Eyewitness
GAVI blogs
Audio-visual
Board & committee minutes
GAVI documents
Country documents
Evaluations
Financial reports
Guidelines and forms
Policies
Strategy
Supply and procurement
Publications
Events
You are here:
Library
Audio-visual
Audio-visual
Galleries
Galleries
Accelerating Africa's access to rotavirus vaccine
Accelerating Africa's access to rotavirus vaccine
in page functions
Sudan's introduction of rotavirus vaccine earlier this year signalled the start of a wave of African countries ready to counter the world's leading cause of diarrhoeal deaths with GAVI support. In September, the Alliance approved funding for 12 more African countries to introduce the rotavirus vaccine.
27 September 2011
GAVI/2011
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
In Sierra Leone, doctors saved the life of Aisha Kamara’s son Abdul, after he contracted severe diarrhoea. Other African children are not so lucky. One quarter of a million of Africa’s under-fives die from severe diarrhoea each year.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
At Baruka village, 40 km outside Khartoum, Howa Hasa Al Rasul watches as a doctor prepares to administer the vaccine that will help protect her daughter Fatima Adil from a disease that causes 40% of all severe diarrhoea cases in Sudan.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
At the Samir health centre in Sudan's capital Khartoum, this baby was one of the first of tens of thousands of children to receive rotavirus vaccine.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
With 1850 health centres spread across thousands of square kilometers, Sudan has trained scores of doctors and nurses to ensure rotavirus vaccine is administered correctly. The vaccine needs to be delivered orally according to a strict schedule.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
At Baruka Village, Raja Ali Khider watches as health officials register her two-month-old daughter Zuhir Noran’s rotavirus vaccination. Each vaccine delivered is recorded on immunisation cards to facilitate monitoring.
GAVI/2011
In September 2011, GAVI approved funding to support the introduction of rotavirus vaccine in 16 more countries, 12 of them in Africa: Angola, Burundi, Cameroon, Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Madagascar, Malawi, Niger, Rwanda & Tanzania.
Doune Porter/GAVI/2011
In Tanzania, preparations are already under way for a vaccine that cannot come quick enough. During the rainy season patients at the Mwananyamala Hospital in Dar-e-Salaam are squeezed three to a bed due to severe diarrhoea outbreaks.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
Tanzania’s cold chain, which ensures that the rotavirus vaccine is kept at a constant temperature from storage in Dar-es-Salaam to distribution in even the remotest province, has been expanded and upgraded.
Ryan Youngblood/GAVI/2011
Health workers are already alerting local communities that children will need the new vaccine. “We are educating our pregnant women, couples and, if necessary, entire villages,” says Sister Moshi Athumani at Mnazi Mmoja clinic.
Doune Porter/GAVI/2011
Delivering rotavirus vaccine in Africa will cause a ripple effect that runs from the smallest village to entire economies. Healthy children go to school. Families can be more productive. Communities and societies are more prosperous.
Latest Galleries
Launch ceremony for introduction of pentavalent vaccine - Mogadishu, Somalia
Immunisation in Islamic countries
Madagascar celebrates the introduction of pneumococcal vaccines
Brazzaville marks Congo's first pneumococcal vaccinations
Rotavirus vaccines introduced in health centres in Yemen
The human tragedy and the hope behind Ghana’s historic decision
Model immunisation system sets standard for Mozambique
Seth Berkley in Mozambique March 2012
Chad’s campaign against meningitis A
GAVI’s Matching Fund announcement at WEF
View all latest galleries
Related Library items
Malawi to protect thousands of children’s lives with rotavirus vaccines
Immunisation protecting 370 million additional children through successful global partnership
Rotavirus vaccines, potential to save 2.4 million lives
New weapons against ancient foes - new generation vaccines will battle diseases that kill Millions
GAVI Alliance announces funding for new vaccines against two major killers of children in poorest nations
Related information
Homepage rotavirus carousel(2)
Rotavirus vaccine support
Rotavirus vaccine support timeline
Getting vaccines on the agenda
GAVI blogs
Search keywords
Rotavirus
Tanzania
Sudan
country support
modal window here