Executive Director of National Primary Health Care Development Agency
(NPHCDA), Dr Ado Muhammed, has said about N130,000 Nigerian children
lose their lives annually to pneumonia related ailments.
Speaking at a function to mark this year World Pneumonia Day,
Muhammed said, notwithstanding the introduction of new vaccines, there
are still challenges confronting the country in preventing pneumonia.
“A staggering 130,000 Nigerian children lose their lives to pneumo
nia
every year, the second highest number of child pneumonia deaths in the
world.”
He said the number was devastating given that “less than half of all
the children with suspected pneumonia related ailments are taken for
treatment and just 23 per cent received antibiotics in Nigeria”, adding
that Pneumonia related death is highest among low income earner
families.”
He therefore urged Civil Society Organisations to be more vigilant on the implementation of immunisation programmes.
“They should be our ombudsmen and community liaisons to track
programme and policy implementation while at the same time stimulate
community demand for immunisation services,” Muhammed said.
In order to address the perennial cases of the disease, a director in
the agency, Dr. Emmanuel Abanida, told journalists that the government
had initiated plans to carry out immunisation in eight states prone to
pneumonia.
Abanida explained that with the introduction of Pentavalent Vaccine,
which is to be administered in 13 states, pneumonia pandemic would
reduce drastically in the country.
The new pneumonia immunisation exercise had been fixed for December 3 in 13 states of the federation.
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