Uganda tackles yellow fever with new travel requirement, vaccination campaign
Uganda has rolled out a nationwide yellow fever vaccination
campaign to help safeguard its population against the mosquito-borne disease
that has long posed a threat.
By the end of April, Ugandan authorities had vaccinated 12.2
million of the 14 million people targeted, said Dr. Michael Baganizi, an
official in charge of immunization at the health ministry.
Uganda will now require everyone travelling to and from the
country to have a yellow fever vaccination card as an international health
regulation, Baganizi said.
Ugandan authorities hope the requirement will compel more
people to get the yellow fever shot amid a general atmosphere of vaccine
hesitancy that worries healthcare providers in the East African nation.
The single-dose vaccine has been offered free of charge to
Ugandans between the ages of 1 and 60. Vaccination centres in the capital,
Kampala, and elsewhere included schools, universities, hospitals and local
government units.
Before this, Ugandans usually paid to get the yellow fever
shot at private clinics, for the equivalent of $27.
Uganda, with 45 million people, is one of 27 countries on
the African continent classified as at high risk for yellow fever outbreaks.
According to the World Health Organization, there are about 200,000 cases and
30,000 deaths globally each year from the disease.
Uganda's most recent outbreak was reported earlier this year
in the central districts of Buikwe and Buvuma.
Yellow fever is caused by a virus transmitted by the bite of
infected mosquitoes. The majority of infections are asymptomatic. Symptoms can
include fever, muscle pain, headache, loss of appetite and nausea or vomiting,
according to the WHO.
Uganda's vaccination initiative is part of a global strategy
launched in 2017 by the WHO and partners such as the U.N. Children's Agency to
eliminate yellow fever by 2026. The goal is to protect almost 1 billion people
in Africa and the Americas.
A midterm evaluation of that strategy, whose results were
published last year, found that 185 million people in high-risk African
countries had been vaccinated by August 2022.
In Uganda, most people get yellow fever shots when they
are travelling to countries such as South Africa that demand proof of
vaccination on arrival.
James Odite, a nurse working at a private hospital which has
been designated as a vaccination centre in a suburb of the capital, Kampala,
told the AP that hundreds of doses remained unused after the yellow fever
vaccination campaign closed. They will be used in a future mass campaign.
Among the issues raised by vaccine-hesitant people was the
question of whether "the government wants to give them expired
vaccines," Odite said.
Baganizi, the immunization official, said Uganda's
government has invested in community "sensitization" sessions during
which officials tell people that vaccines save lives.
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