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United Nations warns of 'perfect storm' as 23 million children miss basic childhood vaccines during Covid-19
- Everyday health services were disrupted during coronavirus due to social distancing and parents avoided clinics that were open out of fear
- As borders start to open again, unvaccinated children face exposure to diseases like measles and mumps
![Routine childhood vaccinations dropped significantly during the pandemic, putting more kids at risk of measles and other contagious, preventable diseases.](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/landscape/public/d8/images/methode/2021/07/15/98165d76-e53c-11eb-9aba-1b7e08262541_image_hires_160507.jpg?itok=gil_PZFF&v=1626336321)
The UN warned Thursday that a “perfect storm” is brewing, due to the pandemic disrupting access to routine vaccinations and leaving millions of children worldwide at risk of measles and other deadly diseases.
A full 23 million children missed out on basic childhood vaccines last year, as everyday health services were hit worldwide by restrictions aimed at controlling Covid-19 and many parents shunned the clinics that were open for fear of exposure to the virus.
It marks the highest number in over a decade and 3.7 million more than in 2019, according to data published Thursday by the World Health Organisation and the UN’s children’s agency UNICEF.
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And the sharp decline in routine vaccinations comes as many countries have begun loosening restrictions even as the pandemic is far from over.
This has the potential of not only driving up Covid transmission, but also of allowing otherwise vaccine-preventable diseases to begin spreading, as restrictions at least provided a buffer for unvaccinated children against exposure to childhood diseases.
“In 2021, we have potentially a perfect storm about to happen,” Kate O’Brien, head of the WHO’s vaccines and immunisation department, told reporters.
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‘Ringing the alarm’
She warned there was now “an accumulation of children who are not immune because they haven’t received vaccines, and more and more transmission because of too early release of public health and social measures.
“This is the sort of perfect storm we’re ringing the alarm bell about right now,” O’Brien said, stressing WHO’s “high concern about these very outbreak prone diseases”.
“We need to act now in order to protect these children.”
The MMR vaccine is just one of the many inoculations a child gets when they're young.
The data published Thursday revealed that rising numbers of children across all regions missed first vital vaccine doses last year, while millions more missed later vaccines.
Compared with 2019, 3.5 million more children missed their first doses of the three-dose diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine (DTP) while three million more children missed their first measles dose, the data showed.
Even more concerning perhaps, as many as 17 million children, mainly living in conflict-affected communities or in under-serviced remote areas or in informal slum settings, likely did not receive a single vaccine in 2020.
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‘Catastrophic’
Global coverage for all three DTP doses had stalled at 86 per cent over recent years, but then slumped to 83 per cent in 2020, meaning 22.7 million children missed out.
As for measles, which is highly contagious and requires vaccination uptake of at least 95 per cent to avoid spread, the first-dose vaccination rate slipped from 86 to 84 per cent last year, while only 71 per cent received a second dose.
The situation varies greatly, with data showing a particularly sharp drop in vaccination rates in Southeast Asia.
World Health Organisation Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has warned against forgoing normal vaccinations during the pandemic, saying it could further stress health care systems. Photo: TNS
In India, which has been ravaged by a devastating second Covid wave, the number of children who missed their first DTP dose more than doubled to over three million last year, up from 1.4 million in 2019.
Pakistan, Indonesia and the Philippines also saw the number of unprotected children rise significantly.
In the Americas, UN agencies warned that “a troubling picture is also emerging”, although not necessarily due to the pandemic.
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They warned that funding shortages, vaccine misinformation and other factors are continuing to push down the rate of children who have received all three DTP shots, which fell from 91 per cent in 2016 to just 82 per cent last year.
The UN has warned against sacrificing routine childhood vaccines in the rush to roll out Covid jabs.
“Even as countries clamour to get their hands on Covid-19 vaccines, we have gone backwards on other vaccinations, leaving children at risk from devastating but preventable diseases like measles, polio or meningitis,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned in the statement.
“Multiple disease outbreaks would be catastrophic for communities and health systems already battling Covid-19, making it more urgent than ever to invest in childhood vaccination and ensure every child is reached.”