WHO-UNICEF: Immunization coverage reaches 84%, still short of 90% goal

WHO-UNICEF: Immunization coverage reaches 84%, still short of 90% goal
Excerpt from Overview
More than 111 million infants received vaccines in 2013 to protect them from deadly diseases. These infants account for about 84% of the world’s children, but an estimated 21.8 million infants remained unvaccinated, according to new estimates from WHO and UNICEF

The estimates tell a success story for the Expanded Programme on Immunization, namely that global coverage with vaccines, measured by the proportion of kids who received 3 doses of vaccines containing diphtheria tetanus-pertussis (DTP3), rose from 73% in 2000 to 84% in 2013, a substantial increase.

But the numbers still fall short of the goal set out in the Global Vaccine Action Plan, which was endorsed by the World Health Assembly in 2012. That plan, which aims to prevent millions of deaths through more equitable access to vaccines, has a target of 90% coverage for all vaccines by the year 2020. The percentage of children who receive vaccines has been above 80% since 2006.

“We face a challenge in closing the gap between 84% and 90%,” said Michel Zaffran, Coordinator of WHO’s Expanded Programme on Immunization. “The countries have succeeded in maintaining a high level of vaccination coverage while, at the same time, introducing new vaccines and immunizing an increasing number of children born each year. However, it is hard for them to reach all children including those in remote areas or in urban slums.”

Small anti vaccination groups in some countries, Zaffran noted, also sometimes cause difficulties with misinformation about vaccines, presenting added challenges to national immunization programs in some cases.

Three of WHO’s regions reported very high immunization coverage: the Western Pacific with 96%; the European Region with 96%; and the Region of the Americas with 90%. Coverage was slightly lower in the: Eastern Mediterranean Region at 82%; in the South-East Asia Region at 77%; and in the African Region at 75%.

The data used in these estimates comes from official reports by national authorities as well as survey data from the published and grey literature. On a country by country basis, about two thirds of WHO’S 194 Member States achieved immunization coverage of 90% or higher for the commonly used DPT3 vaccine measurement, the figures show.

Global coverage with at least one dose of measles containing vaccine was 84% and 128 WHO member states reached at least 90% national coverage. An estimated 52% of children were vaccinated with 2 doses of measles containing vaccine during 2013 through routine immunization services.
Data on WHO immunization coverage