НҮБ-ын мэдээллээр олон улсын тусламжийн санхүүжилт буурч, мөргөлдөөнт бүс нутгуудын нөхцөл байдал хүндэрснээс үүдэн дархлаажуулалтын зорилтот түвшинд хүрэх үйл явц удааширч байна.
Өнгөрсөн онд 13.5 сая хүүхэд огт вакцин хийлгээгүй буюу “тэг тун”-тай байгааг ДЭМБ болон ЮНИСЕФ-ийн тайланд дурджээ. Эдгээр хүүхдийн талаас илүү хувь нь Сахарын цөлийн бүсийн Африкт амьдарч байгаа бөгөөд Нигери улс хамгийн өндөр үзүүлэлттэй байна. Бүгд Найрамдах Ардчилсан Конго Улс, Йемен, Этиоп, Ангол зэрэг улсууд вакцинжуулалтын хамрагдалт хамгийн багатай орнуудын тоонд багтжээ.
Хэдийгээр 2025 онд вакцин хийлгээгүй хүүхдийн тоо өмнөх оноос буурсан ч COVID-19 цар тахлын өмнөх үеийн үзүүлэлтээс өндөр хэвээр байна. ЮНИСЕФ-ийн мэргэжилтэн, доктор Эфрем Леманго вакцинжуулалтын явц нь 2030 он гэхэд вакцин хийлгээгүй хүүхдийн тоог хоёр дахин бууруулах дэлхий нийтийн зорилтод хүрэхэд хангалтгүй байгааг онцлов.
Мөргөлдөөнт болон тогтворгүй нөхцөлтэй бүс нутгууд нь дархлаажуулалтын хамгийн том саад болсоор байна. Тухайлбал, Йемен улс нь дифтери, татран, хөхүүл ханиадны эсрэг вакцины хамралтаар дэлхийд хамгийн доогуур үзүүлэлттэй байгаа бол Судан улс дайны нөхцөлд ч вакцинжуулалтыг сайжруулж чадсан эерэг жишээ болжээ.
НҮБ-ын зүгээс зарим дунд болон өндөр орлоготой улс орнуудад вакцинжуулалтын түвшин буурч байгаад санаа зовниж байна. Энэ нь засаглалын сул тал, улс төрийн дэмжлэг буурсан төдийгүй вакцинжуулалттай холбоотой ташаа мэдээлэл тархсантай шууд холбоотой аж. Үүний улмаас сүүлийн таван жилийн хугацаанд 97 улс оронд улаанбурхан өвчний томоохон дэгдэлтүүд бүртгэгдсэн байна.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
<![CDATA[{"className":"sc-1ge0fwe-0","newsletterData":{"pianoFieldName":"receiveIndyHealthNews","regTitle":"Health Check","subscriptionGroup":"health","subscriptionGroupId":"a476a40b-80d6-475e-83ee-36e2c8c6dcb9","type":"health","pathPrefix":["/news/health","/news/science"],"associatedAuthors":["Rebecca Thomas"],"title":"Sign up for our free Health Check email to receive exclusive analysis on the week in health","mobileTitle":"Get our free Health Check email","imageSrc":"https://static.independent.co.uk/static-assets/images/newsletters/healthCheck1_1.png","description":"Behind the headline review on the week in health","label":"I would like to receive morning headlines Monday – Friday plus breaking news alerts by email“,”newsletterKey”:”receiveHealthCheck”,”regSourceSection”:”Health”,”regSourceNewsletter”:”NSC”},”isClimate”:false}]]>
More than 13 million children missed all routine vaccinations last year, the UN has warned – saying progress towards immunisation targets is too slow and that recent gains could unravel as international aid cuts hit.
Last year, there were 13.5 million so-called “zero-dose” children, and more than half live in sub-Saharan Africa, with Nigeria accounting for the largest number globally.
The Democratic Republic of Congo, Yemen, Ethiopia and Angola were also among the ten worst-affected countries, estimates from the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF show.
cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu1”, injectedAtParagraph: 3’); }]]>
It is a sharp drop from the previous year, when 14.2 million children received no routine vaccinations, but remains higher than before the COVID-19 pandemic. It is also almost four million above the 2025 milestone needed to meet the global goal of halving the number of unvaccinated children by 2030.
“The pace of reduction is too slow to reach the goals by the end of the decade,” Dr Ephrem Lemango, UNICEF’s Associate Director for Health and Global Chief of Immunization, told press during a press briefing.
“This is commendable progress, but it is still far from enough to reach every child with lifesaving vaccines.”
Despite the improvement, Dr Lemango said progress remained uneven. The report said 74 countries had more zero-dose children in 2025 than in 2019.
cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “taboola-carousel-thumbnails”, injectedAtParagraph: 7’); }]]>
However, UNICEF warned that this level of coverage could be the best we ever see. The 2025 data sets also do not yet show the impact of international funding cuts as most vaccination programmes had already received their funding for the year when the cuts were announced.
cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu2”, injectedAtParagraph: 8’); }]]>
Conflict remains one of the biggest barriers, continuing to leave millions beyond the reach of routine health services. More than half of the world’s zero-dose children now live in fragile and conflict-affected settings, even though those countries account for only around a third of the world’s births.
Yemen, where years of conflict have devastated the country’s health system, recorded the world’s lowest coverage for the first dose of the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP1) vaccine.
cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu3”, injectedAtParagraph: 10’); }]]>
Rapid population growth in many low-income African nations also means health services must vaccinate ever larger numbers of children simply to maintain existing coverage. Nigeria had the world’s largest number of completely unvaccinated children, driven by both low immunisation coverage and one of the world’s largest birth cohorts.
Yet Lemango pointed to Sudan, which recorded the largest improvement reported anywhere in the world last year, as evidence that progress is still possible even during war.
The UN also expressed concern about falling vaccination rates in some middle- and high-income countries, blaming governance challenges, declining political commitment and growing vaccine misinformation.The findings also come amid growing concern over the resurgence of measles. The report found that 97 countries experienced large or disruptive measles outbreaks during the past five years, and generally they had substantially lower routine immunisation coverage.
This article has been produced as part of The Independent’s Rethinking Global Aid project

