{"id":1910,"date":"2021-01-24T10:25:04","date_gmt":"2021-01-24T08:25:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wits-vida.org\/wordpress21\/?p=1910"},"modified":"2021-10-21T15:47:20","modified_gmt":"2021-10-21T13:47:20","slug":"how-vaccines-save-lives","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wits-vida.org\/articles\/how-vaccines-save-lives\/","title":{"rendered":"The story of how vaccines save lives is important to tell \u2013 now more than ever"},"content":{"rendered":"
Only clean\u202fdrinking water\u202frivals\u202fvaccination\u202fin its ability to save lives, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). And, although vaccine safety gets more public attention than vaccination effectiveness, independent experts and the WHO have shown that vaccines are far safer than therapeutic medicines.<\/p>\n
Vaccines have virtually eliminated devastating and cruel illnesses like polio and pertussis (whooping cough), and serious lower respiratory tract diseases.<\/p>\n<\/div>
Wits University scientists are leaders in paediatric immunisation research, with their studies informing global public health programmes. Wits teams are also leading two crucial Covid-19 vaccine trials in South Africa and Africa.<\/p>\n
Dr Michelle Groome, Senior Researcher at the\u00a0Vaccines and Infectious Diseases Analytics Research Unit (VIDA) at Wits, says that since the introduction of the rotavirus vaccine in Africa, for example, an estimated 135 000 rotavirus hospitalisations and 21\u202f000 deaths have been prevented annually. Rotavirus causes serious diarrheal symptoms in children. South Africa was the first African country to introduce the rotavirus vaccine into its national immunisation programme in 2009, and since then, diarrhoeal hospitalisation has decreased by 34-57% for children under the age of five.<\/p>\n
\u201cVaccination is the best way to prevent many childhood diseases, increase life expectancy and improve a person\u2019s quality of life. In a low-to-middle income country, like South Africa, the robust immunisation programme is a major achievement. We have seen a decline in deaths from infectious diseases and now rely on high vaccine coverage to prevent outbreaks and disease,\u201d<\/em> says Groome.<\/p>\n<\/div> A vaccination against the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) has been found to better protect infants born to women from low-to-middle income countries, such as South Africa, than those in wealthier countries.<\/p>\n Dr Clare Cutland, the Scientific Coordinator at the African Leadership in Vaccinology Expertise (ALIVE) consortium, and Professor Shabir Madhi, Executive Director of VIDA and the Dean of the\u00a0Faculty of Health Sciences<\/a>\u00a0at Wits, co-authored a seminal global study on RSV. The paper, published in the\u00a0New England Journal of Medicine<\/em>\u00a0in July 2020, provides evidence that immunising pregnant women could protect their infants from severe RSV, which is a leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection.<\/p>\n While the RSV vaccine will not be administered to pregnant women yet, the global study is pegged to inform WHO policy on the use of this initiative in public immunisation programmes.<\/p>\n<\/div>Vaccines better protect babies of mothers from poorer countries<\/h3><\/div>