Low vaccination hampering treatment of diphtheria patients – MSF, as 600 deaths recorded in six months
International medical support outreach, the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has claimed that low vaccination of the country’s population is greatly hampering the treatment of diphtheria victims in the Northern Nigeria regions, leading to more loss of lives of mostly children.
Full vaccination against diphtheria, requiring three doses, reduces the risk of infection and protects against severe forms of the disease and death
Nigeria is currently facing the largest diphtheria outbreak in its history, with about 17,000 suspected cases and nearly 600 deaths recorded since January 2023, mostly among children.
According to the MSF medical teams attending to patients in the northern Nigeria regions, including than 12,000 patients so far this year in Kano state, which is the most affected, most deaths could be avoided ‘if children were fully vaccinated.’
MSF teams are also treating diphtheria patients in the states of Borno and Bauchi. However, low vaccination rates in Nigeria are making it much more difficult to save lives and stop the epidemic.
“Routine immunization is the only lasting solution to curb and prevent future outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases such as diphtheria, measles, polio, or tetanus.
“Many deaths that we see in our facilities, who are mostly children, could be avoided if children were fully vaccinated,” said Hussein Ismail, MSF project coordinator in Kano.
Full vaccination against diphtheria, requiring three doses, reduces the risk of infection and protects against severe forms of the disease and death. Those who fall severely ill and die are disproportionately unvaccinated.
In Kano state, only about 25 percent of the patients admitted to MSF facilities had been partially or fully vaccinated for diphtheria, which reflects the alarmingly low vaccination coverage. Only 15 percent of the patients that MSF has treated for diphtheria at Gwange Pediatric Hospital in Maiduguri, in Borno state, were fully vaccinated.
The Nigerian health authorities, World Health Organization and UNICEF have now launched a vaccination campaign in three phases, targeting 14 states. MSF welcomes national and international efforts to address the current outbreak and continues to call for increased routine immunizations for children across Nigeria and the wider region.
Donor countries and institutions including GAVI, ECHO and Africa Center for Disease Control and Prevention should invest further in long-term plans to increase routine vaccination coverage, beyond the short-term response to immediate outbreaks.