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Kenya celebrates pneumococcal vaccine rollout
Kenya celebrates pneumococcal vaccine rollout
in page functions
Kenya marks the introduction of pneumococcal vaccine into its national immunisation programme with a special event at Nairobi's International Conference Centre.
14 February 2011
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Hundreds of mothers were invited to the ICC event so their children could be immunised against Kenya's second biggest children. Each year, 35,000 under-fives die from pneumonia, the most common form of serious pneumococcal disease.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
“This vaccine has come at a most opportune time. One in every five deaths of children in our country is attributed to pneumonia,” said President Mwai Kibaki, who attended the ceremony with Health and Sanitation minister Beth Mugo (left).
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Mary Wambui looks on as a nurse delivers the first of three pneumococcal vaccine doses to her daughter Esther Nyambura. The scene will be repeated countless times oin health clinics across the country, as Kenya targets 85% pneumococcal vaccine coverage by 2012.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
“The introduction of the pneumococcal vaccine is an historic step towards improved health for children in Kenya and in other developing countries,” said Health Minister Beth Mugo, addressing the ICC ceremony. Since the start of 2011, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guyana, Honduras and Yemen have also introduced the vaccine.
Piers Benatar/GAVI/2011
From the moment the first consignment of pneumococcal vaccines reached Kenya in September 2010, Eunice Wanjiku Njabu and 1,000s of her fellow health workers have been attending one-day training sessions, learning how to administer the vaccine.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Without access to pneumococcal vaccines, nurses at Nairobi's Langata Health Centre are helpless to defend nearby Kibera shanty town’s youngest generations from pneumonia. Tabitha Muikali, 32, who lives with one-year-old son John Dolo, could only watch as her eldest son spent one month losing his fight to survive the illness.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Boniface Ajwala, medical officer at Langata, listens to the breathing of Esther Wabui, aged five. Esther is undergoing treatment for pneumonia. Nearly half of the children treated at the health centre are brought in suffering from pneumonia.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Josephine Anyango, aged 21, stands outside her house in Kibera with her 11-month-old daughter Michelle Atieno. Aware of the risks of contracting pneumonia, Juliet was one of the mothers queueing to vaccinate their children at the ICC launch event.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
Kenyan mothers’ happiness at seeing their children receive the life-saving pneumococcal vaccination reflects the success of the Health Ministry’s ‘Stop Pneumonia. There is a solution’ campaign, which has helped rise national awareness of pneumonia.
Riccardo Gangale/GAVI/2011
“The roll-out of the pneumococcal vaccine has become a reality across the world allowing developing country governments to reduce deaths and enable millions of children to grow up healthy,” said Helen Evans, interim CEO of GAVI.
Related information
Pentavalent vaccine support timeline
Pneumococcal vaccine support timeline
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