Haiti Begins National Vaccine Campaign

The government of Haiti, with the help of United Nations agencies, has initiated a national campaign to provide vaccines against various diseases, including polio and measles. It aims to vaccinate 5,700,000 people.

According to a press release issued by the United Nations on Tuesday, UNICEF, the World Health Organization, and the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti cooperated with the government to help the vaccine campaign achieve success. The efforts will cost approximately nine and a
Haiti Begins National Vaccine Campaign
Date: November 6, 2007
New York, NY
United States of America
 half million dollars.

Two types of measles vaccine are to be provided to Haitians from one to nineteen years old, and children four years old or younger will receive a polio vaccination. A tetanus vaccine is to be provided to women who are of childbearing age. The 5.7 million people targeted by the national vaccine campaign consist of fifty-eight percent of the population of Haiti.

U.N. peacekeepers from the Stabilization Mission helped to transport the vaccine equipment and supplies, making sure that they were kept under the proper conditions. The U.N. Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Haiti was quoted as saying that the campaign provided a "perfect example" of what can be achieved when U.N. agencies, govt. authorities, peacekeepers, and foreign countries (which provide funding) work together "in close collaboration."

The World Health Organization's page indicates that Haiti's health situation is relatively poor. The chance that children will die before the age of five is 120/1000 (compared to 27/1000 in Mexico, and 21/1000 in Venezuela), and the percentage of child births with a "skilled attendant" is just under 25% (one of the lowest in the world). The likelihood of death between the ages of fifteen and sixty is the highest in the western hemisphere, with Guatemala a somewhat distant 2nd.