Via The Lancet, a discouraging report: Ukraine at risk of polio outbreak. Excerpt:
Fear and mistrust among Ukrainians towards vaccinations must change if the country is to avoid outbreaks of polio and other potentially lethal diseases, international health officials have warned.
The country has seen a surge of recorded cases of measles, rubella, and mumps in recent years—measles cases were up from less than 100 in 2010 to more than 12 700 last year—as vaccination coverage fell to a 20-year low.
WHO and UNICEF have also recently said that an outbreak of polio is a real danger. The disease is rarely seen in Europe today but Ukraine is particularly vulnerable to an outbreak, experts say, with only 74% of the population immunised against it. This compares to average coverage in Europe and the USA of more than 90%. The chances of an outbreak are so great that Ukraine last month hosted a WHO-led polio simulation exercise.
Concerns are rooted in low coverage for vaccinations, brought about because of not only supply problems but also the fact that a large minority of parents refuse to have their children vaccinated. “Public trust in vaccinations has been eroded in recent years and this has to be changed. People's confidence in vaccinations has to be won back”, Dorit Nitzan, head of WHO's Ukrainian branch, tells The Lancet.
A survey by UNICEF last year showed that as many as a third of Ukrainian parents are against vaccinations. Only around 50% of children in the Ukraine are fully immunised against polio, measles, rubella, and other diseases.
Vaccinations are free under state health care and national health guidelines say children should be vaccinated against ten infectious diseases. But compliance is poor and has been falling for the past 5 years—from around 80% in 2008 to just 50% in 2012, according to UNICEF.
The drop-off followed a high-profile case in 2008, when a boy died following a measles and rubella vaccination. His death was unrelated to the vaccination but incorrect media reporting of the case and a confused government response created a deep-seated mistrust of vaccinations among the public, which continues today.
Many parents speak privately of being aware of the risks of not having their child immunised but say they are preferable to the dangers of vaccines. Olena Merkulova, a 34-year-old mother in Kiev, tells The Lancet that she had her 12-year-old daughter vaccinated but could understand why other parents rejected vaccination for their children. “It concerns me greatly. The public doesn't have enough information about the content of vaccines and possible risks, and you hear so many stories about vaccines being unsafe. There is definitely something very wrong with the vaccination process if a mother needs to be worried”, she says.
By law parents are supposed to produce a certificate of immunisation before their children can start school but they often get round this by obtaining fakes. WHO, UNICEF, and some prominent Ukrainian doctors have been at pains in recent years to publicly stress the safety and efficacy of vaccines.
However, not all parents who do want to get their children vaccinated can. Although vaccines are free through the state health-care system, hospitals often run short of them. Parents then face a choice of waiting, potentially for many months, until the vaccine becomes available again, or paying out of their own pockets at a pharmacy. In a country where the average monthly wage is around €300, this cost is sometimes prohibitively expensive.