Map | A Partnership for Children's Health Search:  Advanced Search
Home General Information Country Support Board Task Forces Resources Media Center
Immunization Forum GAVI Updates Immunization Focus Board Documents Policy & Technical issues Other websites CVI Forum
Current Issue Archives Subscriptions About Immunization Focus
Printer-friendly format

Quick Reference:

What is GAVI?

Fact sheets

Governance

Board Documents

Guidelines

Press Releases

Immunization Information

Immunization Forum
Latest Issue

GIN/GAVI Update

Glossary

Employment

Immunization Focus - the GAVI quarterly

THE IDEA EXCHANGE - March 2001

En Français

Don’t be distracted from good routine immunization: Catriona Waddington opens a debate on whether GAVI and governments have got their priorities right

Equity is the key to our policy

Tore Godal responds

WE are all agreed that the biggest challenge is to immunize all the world's children. We are striving to achieve equity. And that means doing two things. First, we need to reach out to all children. Second, we need to narrow the gap between children in the richer countries and children in the poorest. In industrialized countries, a child can now expect to receive vaccines against 11 or 12 diseases. In the poorest countries, children will be protected against six or seven diseases if they are lucky.

We have learnt some lessons. Despite the spectacular gains in routine immunization coverage with the basic six vaccines in the 1980s, progress was not maintained in the 1990s and, by the end of the last decade, one in four children was still not receiving those six vaccines routinely. Business as usual did not seem to be enough; new incentives were needed if coverage was to increase. GAVI is trying to create such incentives, both for strengthening existing services and for the introduction of new and under-used vaccines.

Catriona Waddington raises concerns about National Immunization Days. As far as this relates to GAVI policy, let me be clear: the Alliance is first and foremost about strengthening routine services. The positive side of NIDs is that they can, and do, reach out to virtually all children (1) . To our knowledge, they are the only approach that achieves this. If we are serious about equity, we must support governments' use of immunization days as a means to reach the unreached, but only for this purpose, and as a complement to a good routine service.

We know that NIDs can have negative effects on the routine service. They must be planned as a regular programme – in effect, they can be incorporated into the routine system. Disruption to the rest of the system can, I believe, be reduced if, where appropriate, immunization days are conducted at regional level rather than nationally. Recent analyses have suggested that a planned programme of immunization days can actually help to strengthen a health system (2) .

Equity is also at the heart of GAVI's push to give more children access to new and under-used vaccines such as hepatitis B and Hib. Many middle-income countries are using these vaccines now, but they are still strikingly absent from the poorest countries. There are of course real questions about how such countries can sustain the resources to buy these vaccines. Realistically, the poorest countries are going to need international support for their immunization programmes until they move out of the poorest bracket, and that is why the Alliance is working hard to find mechanisms by which such support can be sustained beyond the five years we're committed to.

The vaccines are more expensive per dose than the traditional six vaccines, but they are cost-effective in terms of their cost per healthy year of life gained. And, in terms of their cost per capita, they can be justified even where public spending on health is below $10 per person per year. But we know that even routine immunization with the basic six vaccines is not maintained in the poorest countries if international support falls away. So all of us recognize that the international community has a duty to maintain its support, while governments have a responsibility to convince donors of the case for doing so.

The question of how GAVI and the Vaccine Fund have allocated support between the purchase of new vaccines and the strengthening of existing services is an important one. The GAVI Board has already noted its concerns about the balance of resources disbursed in the first two rounds. It is currently determining whether corrective measures need to be taken, for example by increasing the size of the "share" awarded to each child in the birth cohort, or by expanding the criteria for which countries are eligible for support to strengthen their existing services.

Dr Tore Godal is Executive Secretary of GAVI.

References

(1) Immunize Every Child - GAVI Strategy for Sustainable Immunization Services.

(2) Disease eradication: friend or foe to the health system?

Immunization Focus March 2001 - Contents

star_int   Contact us | Guestbook | Copyrights | Text site