China's health officials are celebrating reaching one-third of
the country's children in a five-year program to protect them
against hepatitis B.
More than 11 million children in 1,301 counties of central and
western China are now immunized against hepatitis B, Vice-Minister
of Health Jiang Zuojun said yesterday.
But that means health officials will have to hurry to reach the
remaining two-thirds by the project's scheduled deadline next
year.
The US$76 million project, co-funded equally by the Chinese
Government and the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations
(GAVI), started in 2002, the same year the government added
hepatitis B to all routine childhood immunizations.
The campaign targets children under age 5 across an area that
encompasses 470 million people and includes 6 million newborns
annually.
It has reached babies born in hospitals, as well as those born
at home, in mountain villages or in the tents of nomadic
herders.
"This breakthrough was 20 years in the making," Julian
Lob-Levyt, executive secretary of the GAVI Alliance, said as he met
Jiang in Beijing.
"This is how long children in the industrialized world have had
a vaccine to fight this virus, but until recently, progress in
emerging countries and poor remote areas, such as western China,
had been painfully slow."
China's success is a model for other countries still struggling
to stop the spread of the hepatitis B virus and other
vaccine-preventable diseases, he said.
(China Daily July 26, 2006)