Audio By Carbonatix
In response to the confirmed outbreak of yellow fever on 24 December 2023, with two laboratory-confirmed cases identified in Western Equatoria State, the Ministry of Health, in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, and other partners, has initiated a reactive Yellow Fever vaccination campaign as part of preventive response intervention.
Yellow fever, an acute viral hemorrhagic disease transmitted by infected mosquitoes, poses a significant public health threat. Characterized by symptoms such as fever, headache, jaundice, muscle pain, nausea, vomiting, and fatigue, the disease can lead to severe complications, with approximately half of patients succumbing within 7 to 10 days.
As of 3 February 2024, 48 suspected and two confirmed Yellow Fever cases were reported from Yambio, Nzara, Tambura, Ibba, Ezo, and Maridi Counties of Western Equatoria State.
"To address the outbreak, a multidisciplinary team of epidemiologists, public health officers, entomologists, laboratory specialists, and risk communication experts conducted an extensive epidemiological investigation to characterize the extent of the outbreak, identify risk/exposure factors and implement control and prevention measures," stated Honourable Yolanda Awel Deng, Minister of Health.
Dr Humphrey Karamagi, WHO Representative for South Sudan, emphasized, "The yellow fever vaccination campaign aligns with the global strategy to Eliminate Yellow Fever Epidemics (EYE) by 2026. This reactive measure aims to protect populations at high risk and act as a bridge towards integrating the yellow fever vaccine into routine immunization systems."
Targeting approximately 610 000 individuals aged nine months to 65 years in Yambio, Tambura Ezo, Ibba, and Maridi, the vaccination campaign utilizes doses secured from the Global emergency yellow fever vaccine stockpile of the International Coordination Group (ICG) on Vaccine Provision, supported by funding from Gavi.
“It is critical to stop the outbreak and halt further infections. Immunization is the best tool we have to stop the spread. With the deployment of vaccines, and associated supplies and equipment coupled with trained health workers and sensitized communities, we can protect the children and communities affected,” said Hamida Lasseko, UNICEF South Sudan Representative.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of World Health Organization (WHO) - South Sudan.
Latest Stories
-
Mercy Johnson faces backlash over $18.24 menstrual kit
38 minutes -
EU plans to fine Google high triple-digit million euro sum, Handelsblatt reports
47 minutes -
Senegal’s Faye names economist Lo as new prime minister
56 minutes -
Landslide at Angola illegal gold mine kills 28
1 hour -
The Draft NITA Bill should be shredded
1 hour -
Eni and partners approve new development phase for Ivory Coast project
1 hour -
Govt signals tougher scrutiny before renewing Gold Fields’ Tarkwa lease, Reuters report
1 hour -
Africa must build strong systems to achieve sporting success — Herbert Mensah
2 hours -
Gunmen abduct 25 people in twin attacks in Nigeria’s Kwara state, police say
2 hours -
Ebola patients flee in attacks on Congo health facilities, hobbling response
2 hours -
What Is Wrong with Us: Why we keep uprooting young trees because they have not yet become forests
2 hours -
Senegal’s parliament speaker quits two days after prime minister sacked
2 hours -
WHO chief says fast-moving Ebola epidemic is outpacing response efforts
2 hours -
Rubio says Strait of Hormuz has to be open ‘one way or the other’Â
2 hours -
Cocoa farmers, patients and consumers paying price for governance failures – CDM
3 hours