Protect Your Child - Immunise
Encouraging parents to get their child immunised on time is one of the key messages for National Immunisation Week which
kicks off on Saturday.
Immunisation helps protect children against serious diseases that can make them extremely sick, says Immunisation Health
Target Champion Dr Pat Tuohy.
From April 23-29, District Health Boards, immunisation providers and supporters will be promoting immunisation in
communities throughout New Zealand.
‘We’re also hoping that Immunisation Week provides an opportunity for parents who have questions or concerns about
immunisation to talk to their family doctor or health professional about it,” Dr Tuohy says.
Immunisation has proven to be one of the most effective medical breakthroughs in preventing diseases that used to take
an enormous toll on communities.
“Just because we don’t see the kind of epidemics our grandparents lived through doesn’t mean these diseases have
disappeared. Over the past couple of years more than 200 children and adults have caught measles in outbreaks throughout
New Zealand. Some were so sick they had to be hospitalised.”
Immunisation against measles is free and is the best way to prevent the disease, he says.
“Although we’ve made a lot of progress over the past five years, our immunisation rates are still too low to prevent
these kinds of outbreaks. Right now about 88 percent of our two-year-olds are fully immunised but we really need to get
to 95 percent to protect our children and our communities from diseases like measles.”
New Zealand’s Immunisation Week ties in with the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region’s vaccination week.
More information can be found at http://www.wpro.who.int/sites/epi/vaccination/
Raising immunisation rates to 95 percent in under-two-year-olds by 2012 is one of the Government’s Health Targets.
Finding ways to achieve that was the subject of a recent parliamentary select committee inquiry. The committee reported
back last month.
New Zealand children are eligible for free immunisations that protect against 10 diseases. Teenage girls are also
offered immunisation against human papillomavirus.
ENDS