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Vaccine-Preventable Diseases

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Health

Source: TH

Context: Global health bodies — WHO, UNICEF, and Gavi — have issued a warning about the rise in vaccine-preventable diseases due to missed immunisation schedules, misinformation, and funding cuts.

About Vaccine-Preventable Diseases:

Key Data on Rise of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases (VPDs):

14.5 million children missed all routine vaccines in 2023 (Source: WHO-UNICEF).

Over 50% of WHO-monitored countries reported moderate to severe disruptions in immunisation services (2024).

Measles cases in the U.S. (2025): 935 cases as of May, more than triple compared to total cases in 2024

Polio resurgence in several African countries due to delayed vaccination (GPEI, 2023)

UNICEF: Global vaccine delays are threatening 15 million children in fragile/conflict-hit regions

What is Vaccination?

Vaccination is the process of introducing a weakened or inactive pathogen into the body to stimulate the immune system.

• It trains the immune system to recognize and combat harmful diseases without causing illness.

Importance of Vaccination Globally:

Saves Lives: Vaccines save 4.2 million lives annually, preventing 14 major diseases.

E.g. Measles vaccine alone accounts for 60% of lives saved globally.

Boosts Infant Survival: Vaccination has contributed to 40% improvement in child survival rates since 1974.

High Return on Investment: WHO estimates a $54 return for every $1 spent on vaccines.

Prevents Disease Outbreaks: Countries with high vaccine coverage face lower mortality rates and healthcare burden.

Builds Herd Immunity: Protects vulnerable populations unable to be vaccinated, including infants and immunocompromised individuals.

Challenges to Global Vaccination Efforts:

Pandemic Disruptions: COVID-19 delayed routine immunisations; 14.5 million children missed vaccines in 2023.

Funding Shortfalls: Reduced global health budgets threaten continuity of programs like Gavi and COVAX.

Misinformation & Hesitancy: Myths and anti-vaccine campaigns, especially on social media, decrease acceptance.

E.g. Measles cases tripled in the U.S. in 2025.

Conflict & Fragility: Insecurity in regions like Africa, Middle East, South Asia hinders vaccine outreach.

Supply Chain Gaps: Weak cold-chain infrastructure in rural and low-income areas delays vaccine delivery.

Vaccination Status in India:

Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP): Largest public health programme, targets 26 million children and 34 million pregnant women annually.

Progress Achieved:

• India declared polio-free in 2014

• Eliminated maternal and neonatal tetanus in 2015

• Introduced vaccines like Measles-Rubella, PCV, RVV under UIP

Coverage Data:

1% full immunisation coverage (NFHS-5, 2019–21)

• 1 in 4 children still misses essential vaccines

Mission Indradhanush (2014): Targets unvaccinated and partially vaccinated children and pregnant women in underserved areas.

Way Forward:

Strengthen Primary Healthcare: Improve delivery systems and cold chains at grassroots level.

Tackle Misinformation: Use AI tools, community outreach, and education campaigns to combat vaccine myths.

Ensure Political Commitment: Immunisation needs sustained funding and policy attention at all governance levels.

Promote Public-Private Partnerships: Collaborate with NGOs, civil society, and tech platforms for outreach.

Support Global Frameworks: Countries must commit to Immunisation Agenda 2030 and support Gavi’s $9 billion pledge to protect 500 million children.

Conclusion:

Vaccination is one of the most cost-effective health interventions in human history. Despite progress, rising vaccine-preventable diseases call for renewed global efforts. India must strengthen routine immunisation, address hesitancy, and scale outreach to protect every child.

• “Besides being a moral imperative of Welfare State, primary health structure is a necessary pre-condition for sustainable development.” Analyse (UPSC 2021)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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