Saxenian Helen, Sadr-Azodi Nahad, Kaddar Miloud, Senouci Kamel
Independent consultant, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
United Nations Children's Fund, Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa, Amman, Jordan.
BMJ Glob Health. 2019 Mar 30;4(2):e001248. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001248. eCollection 2019.
Immunisation is a cornerstone to primary health care and is an exceptionally good value. The 14 low-income and middle-income countries in the Middle East and North Africa region make up 88% of the region's population and 92% of its births. Many of these countries have maintained high immunisation coverage even during periods of low or negative economic growth. However, coverage has sharply deteriorated in countries directly impacted by conflict and political unrest. Approximately 1.3 million children were not completely vaccinated in 2017, as measured by third dose of diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus vaccine. Most of the countries have been slow to adopt the newer, more expensive life-saving vaccines mainly because of financial constraints and the socioeconomic context. Apart from the three countries that have had long-standing assistance from Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, most countries have not benefited appreciably from donor and partner activities in supporting their health sector and in achieving their national and subnational immunisation targets. Looking forward, development partners will have an important role in helping reconstruct health systems in conflict-affected countries. They can also help with generating evidence and strategic advocacy for high-priority and cost-effective services, including immunisation. Governments and ministries of health would ensure important benefits to their populations by investing further in their immunisation programmes. Where possible, the health system can create and expand fiscal space from efficiency gains in harmonising vaccine procurement mechanisms and service integration; broader revenue generation from economic growth; and reallocation of government budgets to health, and from within health, to immunization.
免疫接种是初级卫生保健的基石,性价比极高。中东和北非地区的14个低收入和中等收入国家占该地区人口的88%,新生儿的92%。即使在经济增长低迷或为负增长期间,这些国家中的许多国家仍保持着较高的免疫接种覆盖率。然而,在受冲突和政治动荡直接影响的国家,免疫接种覆盖率急剧下降。以白喉-百日咳-破伤风三联疫苗第三剂的接种情况衡量,2017年约有130万儿童未完全接种疫苗。大多数国家采用更新、更昂贵的救命疫苗的速度较慢,主要是由于财政限制和社会经济背景。除了三个长期获得疫苗免疫全球联盟(Gavi)援助的国家外,大多数国家在捐助方和合作伙伴支持其卫生部门及实现国家和次国家免疫目标的活动中,并未明显受益。展望未来,发展伙伴在帮助冲突影响国家重建卫生系统方面将发挥重要作用。他们还可以帮助为包括免疫接种在内的高优先级和高性价比服务提供证据和进行战略宣传。各国政府和卫生部通过进一步投资其免疫规划,将确保民众获得重要益处。在可能的情况下,卫生系统可以通过协调疫苗采购机制和服务整合提高效率来创造和扩大财政空间;通过经济增长增加收入;以及将政府预算重新分配用于卫生领域,并在卫生领域内重新分配用于免疫接种。