Title: Immunization Past Successes Future Challenges
1ImmunizationPast Successes - Future Challenges
- USAID Mini University
- 10 May 2004
- Murray Trostle Dr P.H.
2Immunization
- The health of the people is really the
foundation upon which all their happiness and all
their powers as a state depend. - Benjamin Disraeli
3Why immunization?
4Immunization
- In 1796 Edward Jenner developed the first vaccine
smallpox - While a number of vaccines were developed through
the 1970s, immunization coverage was very low in
developing countries.
5Vaccine Chronology
- 1796-smallpox
- 1885-rabies
- 1897-plague
- 1923-diphtheria
- 1926-pertussis
- 1927-tuberculosis
- 1927-tetanus
- 1935-yellow fever
- 1955-IPV
- 1962-OPV
- 1964-measles
- 1967-mumps
- 1970-rubella
- 1981-hepatitis B
- 1988-Hib
- 1998-pneumococcus
6Immunization
- In 1974 WHO launched the Expanded Programme on
Immunization (EPI) - At the start of EPI coverage was around 5
globally. By 1990 it had risen to 75. - This period was characterized by considerable
attention from donors as immunization was one of
the twin engines that propelled the growth of
primary health care.
7Timeline of major immunization events against
DTP3 coverage
8Immunization
- EPI involved six antigens and conducted around
500 million immunizations every year - By 1990 EPI was preventing approximately 3
million child deaths each year or 10,000 lives
saved each day!
9Global Estimated Deaths Occurring and Prevented
2000Measles, Neonatal Tetanus and Pertussis
Deaths prevented
Deaths prevented
Deaths occurring
Deaths prevented
10Immunization
- In 1993 the WDR rated immunization as one of the
most cost effective interventions for saving
lives - During the 90s immunization progress stagnated
and donors turned to other investments - Progress platued and by 2002 the global coverage
was the same as in 1990 and new vaccines were not
being taken up
11Timeline of major immunization events against
DTP3 coverage
12Immunization
- In 2000 the donors formed the Global Alliance for
Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) to reinvigorate
immunization - Along with GAVI came the Vaccine Fund which was
started with a 750 million grant from the Bill
Melinda Gates foundation - Since 2000 donors have contributed a total of
1.3 billion to the Vaccine Fund
13GAVI Board composition
- Countries
- Bilaterals
- Bill and Melinda Gates Children Vaccine Program
- Industry
- Rockefeller Foundation
- Technical Agencies
- UNICEF
- WHO
- World Bank
14GAVI impact
- 40 countries introduced Hep B
- 9 countries introduced Hib
- 10 countries added yellow fever vaccine
- 48 countries received financial support for
expanding coverage - 37 countries received support for safety syringes
for all immunizations
15Immunization
- Even with this remarkable progress serious issues
remain for immunization - Improve coverage
- Financing
- New vaccines
- Sustainability
16What is affecting coverage?
17Global Immunization 1980-2002, DTP3
coverage global coverage at 75 in 2002
Source WHO/UNICEF estimates, 2003
18Factors impacting on coverage
- Regional distribution
- Poverty
- Access to services
- Demand for services
- Resources
- Financial
- Human
19Vaccinated and unvaccinated children by coverage
20Countries reporting national DTP3 coverage in
infants ³ 80 for each of last three years
(2000-2002)
Source WHO Vaccine Preventable Diseases
Monitoring System, 2003
21Slide Date February 03
36 million children not immunized (DTP3), 2001
Source WHO/UNICEF estimates, 2002
22Distributional benefits DTP3 Coverage by
Wealth Quintile(most recent DHS)
Source Gwatkin and Deveshwar-Bahl
23Immunization coverage (DTP3) and infant mortality
in India by socio-economic category
24Immunization coverage (DTP3) and infant mortality
in Bolivia by socio-economic category
25Immunization status for the DTP series(1999 DHS
data)
26Avoid top-down approaches
27What are the financing issues?
28Financing
- Cost of new vaccines
- Cost of increasing coverage
- Covering all elements of immunization to include
routine, campaign, shared costs, new and old
vaccines
29Cost of new vaccines in developing countries
- Older, traditional vaccines range from 0.24 to
0.45 per child immunized - New vaccines are a different story
- Hep B vaccine is 0.66 per child
- Hib vaccine is 7.50 per child
- Combination vaccines are 10.80 per child
30Will new vaccines become less expensive?
- Older, traditional vaccines are inexpensive
because they are - older
- off patent technologies
- made by many manufacturers almost exclusively in
developing countries. - Most new vaccines
- not yet off patent
- are not made in large quantities by many
manufacturers.
31Immunization program costs in 12 GAVI-assisted
countries
32Why the huge gap?
- Primary contributor to the gap the substantial
cost of the new vaccines - Some countries have increased coverage to the
extent that this is having an impact on program
cost too. (This is good news !?)
33How is the gap being addressed?
- Global partners are working with manufacturers to
try to reduce or further off set prices - Some countries are
- allocating more financial resources to
immunization - Considering dropping new vaccines if they cant
find a way to pay - looking to loans
- soliciting donor partners for support
- looking into social health insurance to cover
immunization
34What is the future for introducing new vaccines?
35New and under-utilized vaccines
- Under-utilized vaccines
- Hib, Hep B, Yellow fever
- New vaccines
- Pneumococcal
- Meningococcal
- Rotavirus
- Future vaccines
- HIV.AIDS, malaria, TB
36(No Transcript)
37Vaccine cost to immunize a child
38Barriers Beyond Price
- Global commitment for this kind of
- Government commitment to preventive care and
competing priorities - Financial management
- Human capacity system constraints
- Hard to reach populations
- Cold chain logistics
- Capacity
- Management and maintenance
39Where do we go from here?
40Immunization priorities
- Build capacity
- The twin engine effect may still be alive
- Promote responsibility
- Countries must commit the resources and effort
- Address disease
- The bottom line is still to save lives
- Fulfill our responsibility
- Saving the lives of children is a global
responsibility
41Future of immunization
- Critical areas of attention for countries and
donors - Resources
- Financial
- Technical
- Technology
- Disease impact
- Polio
- Measles
- NNT
42Future of immunization
- Critical areas of attention for countries and
donors - Service delivery
- Maintaining current status
- Reaching the unreached
- Sustainability
- Financial
- Political
- Development
43The best way to escape from a problem is to
solve it. Alan Saporta
44ImmunizationPast Successes - Future Challenges