Reelectionist Senator Sonny Angara has called for a more aggressive immunization drive to ensure that life-saving vaccines reach as many Filipino children as possible.
“We need to be more aggressive in ensuring that every Filipino child receives vaccines to protect them against preventable illnesses. We have to make sure that our immunization program reaches even the hardest to reach child,” Angara said.
The seasoned legislator issued the statement after the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) reported that an estimated 2.9 million children in the Philippines remain unvaccinated, making them vulnerable to potentially deadly infections like measles, rubella and polio.
According to UNICEF, measles immunization coverage in the country has declined to 73 percent in 2017 from 88 percent in 2013. Last year, the immunization coverage further went down to less than 70 percent, or way below the 95 percent required for population immunity.
The U.N. agency cited public hesitancy, vaccine stock-outs, lack of properly trained health workers and accessibility of hard-to-reach areas as the main reasons why many Filipino children have failed to get immunization.
According to the veteran lawmaker, government needs to step up its information campaign on the benefits of the vaccination program, which should include the use of a door-to-door approach in far-flung areas to provide parents with personalized immunization information.
“The government needs to step up its information campaign.”
“It is vital to identify those who are missing vaccination and reach them with life-saving vaccines,” said the senator from Aurora, who is running under the “Alagang Angara” platform.
“Improving vaccination coverage is the key to reducing diseases and deaths among children,” he added.
“Improving vaccination coverage is the key to reducing diseases and deaths among children.”
Close to 30,000 measles cases, including 389 deaths, were recorded nationwide since January this year.
Angara has been pushing parents to have their children vaccinated, saying that immunization is the best protection against measles-a highly contagious disease that can cause life-threatening pneumonia and brain inflammation, middle-ear infection, severe diarrhea, and sometimes death.
“Measles can be prevented with a safe and effective vaccine,” said Angara, a health advocate in the Senate who aggressively pushed for the passage of the Cancer Control Act, Mental Health Act, and the Universal Health Care Act in which he pushed for the inclusion of free checkups, laboratory tests and medicines.
The vaccine is given as part of a combination vaccine called the MMR, which protects against measles, mumps and rubella.
Doctors advise parents to have babies from 6 to 11 months vaccinated for the first shot with a follow-up vaccine shot when they reach 12 to 18 months.
Aside from measles, the country’s mandatory basic immunization covers tuberculosis, polio, hepatitis B, type B influenza, diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis.