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Caribbean Public Health Agency Urges Regional Population To Get Vaccinated

CARPHA’s Director of Surveillance Disease Prevention and Control, Dr. Virginia Asin-Oostburg, said that safe and effective vaccines have been available for many years, and can prevent deaths from diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and measles. Photo credit: CARPHA.

Caribbean Public Health Agency Urges Regional Population To Get Vaccinated

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad and Tobago, April 23, 2019 (CMC) – The Trinidad-based Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) is urging the region, to ensure that its vaccination coverage remains at 95 percent, or more, noting that immunization is one of the most successful and cost-effective public health interventions.

“Vaccines protect not only individuals, but entire communities. If you are vaccinated, you are less likely to become infected, or infect others and your loved ones. That is why is important that our region maintains its vaccination coverage of 95 percent, or more, to ensure that children and other at-risk persons remain healthy,” said CARPHA’s Director of Surveillance Disease Prevention and Control, Dr. Virginia Asin-Oostburg.

CARPHA said that safe and effective vaccines have been available for many years, and can prevent deaths from diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and measles.

It said the most effective way to prevent these life-threatening diseases or severe outcomes from the illnesses is through vaccination.

“The Caribbean has long been a leader among regions of the world, as our countries have applied high standards in the delivery of vaccination programmes. While successfully maintaining a measles-free status since 1991, the Caribbean has also been eradicated of endemic smallpox in 1971, polio in 1994, and rubella and congenital rubella syndrome in 2015,” CARPHA said, adding that the health of the general public improved drastically with the vaccinations that allowed children to survive because they no longer developed severe measles infections.

Dr. Asin-Oostburg said immunisation protects future generations.

“Diseases that used to be common in the region can be prevented through routine childhood vaccines. We urge persons, who have not immunised their children against vaccine-preventable diseases for their age, should do so immediately, or they will be at risk of contracting these diseases,” she advised.

CARPHA said it continues to promote and support regional, strategic vaccination-planning in member states, and that the agency is equipped to investigate and manage communicable diseases, including vaccine-preventable diseases, like polio, measles and rubella.

“As the sub-regional reference laboratory for polio, we provide services to our Member States for the diagnosis of polio and common, viral infections,” said Dr. Gabriel Gonzalez-Escobar, Head of Laboratory Services, at CARPHA.

He said CARPHA is actively working with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), offering services to four countries in Central America and the Spanish Caribbean.

The call, by CARPHA, for the region to ensure the population is vaccinated, comes as the Americas, including the Caribbean, observes Vaccination Week, with the slogan “Protect your community. Do your part”.

CARPHA said that the theme “is a strong call to action, reminding us of the important role we play, in supporting vaccination programs and keeping deadly diseases at bay”.

“Ensuring the continued success of immunisation is a shared responsibility.  CARPHA urges you to support vaccination programs in your country,” the public health agency said.

“To maintain our community protection, we call on Ministries of Health to implement catch-up campaigns.  This will ensure that a person completes their vaccination schedule, in the shortest, but effective, time frame.  Continued vigilance is important.  General practitioners should remain alert and take the appropriate actions, in suspected cases of vaccine-preventable diseases.”


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