| 11 Octobre 2017
Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, 10 October 2017 – A massive cholera immunization campaign started today near Cox’s  Bazar, Bangladesh, to protect newly arrived Rohingya and host  communities from the life-threatening diarrheal disease. 900 000 doses  of the vaccine have been mobilized and are being delivered by more than  200 mobile vaccination teams, making it the second largest oral cholera  vaccination campaign ever. The campaign, which is led by the Ministry of Health and supported by  the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF, is being held in Ukhiya  and Teknaf, where more than half a million people have arrived from  across the border since August, joining vast numbers already residing in  a series of settlements and camps.
 
 The first round of the campaign will cover 650,000 people aged one year  and older. The second round will commence on 31 October and will target  250,000 children between one and five years with an additional dose of  the vaccine for added protection.
 
 “Emergency vaccination saves lives. The risk of cholera is clear and  present, and the need for decisive action apparent,” says Dr. N  Paranietharan, WHO Representative to Bangladesh. “WHO is committed to  mobilizing its full technical and operational capacity to support the  Ministry and our partners to protect, promote and secure the health of  this immensely vulnerable population.”
 
 In the last week, at least 10,292 cases of diarrhoea have been reported  and treated from across the settlements and camps. WHO has warned of the  potential for an outbreak of cholera.
 
 UNICEF and WHO are supporting the Ministry of Health with planning,  distribution, volunteer orientation, operational costs and monitoring.
 
 “This is the second largest oral vaccination campaign in the world after  Haiti in 2016,” says Edouard Beigbeder, UNICEF Representative in  Bangladesh. “Cholera is a dangerous disease, especially among children  living in cramped, unhygienic conditions. Prevention is essential.”
 
 In Ukhiya 150 teams have been deployed to vaccinate the target  population, while 55 teams have been deployed in Teknaf. Each team is  comprised of five members.
 
 Though vaccination can provide life-saving protection against cholera,  it supplements but does not replace other traditional cholera control  measures such as access to clean water, adequate sanitation and good  hygiene.
 
 To help meet present water, sanitation and hygiene needs, UNICEF is  working to scale up its interventions and communication on safe  practices, and is prepositioning critical supplies for case management.  WHO is monitoring water quality and working with the Department of  Public Health Engineering to increase local laboratory capacity, has  raised an early warning, alert and response emergency surveillance  system, and has prepositioned life-saving supplies to ensure a rapid  response if and when an outbreak occurs. In addition, the WHO-led Health  Sector has supported the Ministry set up diarrhea treatment centres  among other response-oriented interventions.









