Health official: ‘Drop in vaccinations could bring back other diseases’

Terrence Deyalsingh
Terrence Deyalsingh

The Minister of Health has once again told parents and guardians to make sure their children are up to date with their immunisations to prevent an outbreak of disease among children.

The minister, Terrence Deyalsingh, said immunisation is especially important during the covid19 pandemic.

In a Ministry of Health virtual press conference on Monday morning, Deyalsingh said, "In the context of covid19, we need to attain a vaccination rate to get herd immunity of 95 to 97 per cent."

A country needs over 95 per cent vaccination to prevent an outbreak, explained Grace Sookchand, manager of the Expanded Programme on Immunisation.

But she said there has been a decrease in vaccinations in the first half of 2020 compared to the same period in 2019.

There is an adequate supply of vaccine, but there has been a decline in public demand. which could be linked to the fear of exposure or contracting covid19. She said other covid19 restrictions could be another factor in why fewer children are being vaccinated.

In March the ministry implemented a block appointment system to prevent overcrowding, telephone appointments and extra sanitisation at health centres to encourage parents to keep up to date with immunizations.

But the number of children coming in for vaccination is still falling.
Sookchand warned that failure to vaccinate children can lead to the "reintroduction of vaccine- preventable disease and increased death due to communicable diseases."

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