Zim To Roll Out Third Mass Polio Vaccination

Kadoma (New Ziana) – Zimbabwe will next week roll out the third mass vaccination against wild polio for children under the age of five years, an official has said.

The countrywide polio vaccination of children under five years is set to take place from May 23 to 26.

The first round of vaccination took place in October last year while the second round was carried out in December the same year.

The third polio vaccination campaign is aimed at protecting children against polio as part of a comprehensive response to Polio outbreaks reported in Malawi and Mozambique recently.
City of Harare principal health promotion officer, Israel Makwara told journalists here that the local authority would make sure that all children below the age of five get the vaccine.

“The third round of the oral mass polio vaccination will take place from May 23rd to the 26th. We are hopeful that all logistics will be in place for that exercise to ensure that any child below the age of five in Harare gets the vaccine,” he said.

He said the city expects to vaccinate over 800 000 children during the four-day period.
“We are expecting to vaccinate over 800 000 children as was the case during the previous two outreaches,” said Makwara.

Polio is a debilitating disease that can cause permanent disability and even death.

The government has said other critical interventions to keep Zimbabwe free of Polio besides the vaccination campaigns are strengthening surveillance and routine immunization.

Source: New Ziana

In other news- Government Frees Airwaves To Foreigners

Harare (New Ziana) – Foreign companies are now free to invest in the broadcasting sector, which was once reserved for Zimbabweans, following the amendment of the Broadcasting Services Act, a government official has said.

Speaking at a Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) meeting on Friday, Deputy Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Kindness Paradza said the move would bring more plurality and diversity in the media sector in the country.
He said government now allowed 40 percent foreign ownership, and another 40 percent board representation in the broadcasting media sector. Learn more

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