National immunization campaign against polio reached more than 178,000 children in Homs.

UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), with the Ministry of Health, with thanks to generous contributions from the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) and GAVI, The Vaccine Alliance.

UNICEF
28 October 2021

On 10 October, UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), with the Ministry of Health, conducted a five-day national immunization campaign against polio, providing children up to the age of five years with the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV), regardless of their previous vaccination status. The campaign aimed to reach 2.780 Million children in 14 governorates across Syria, at fixed health centres and through mobile teams, with thanks to generous contributions  from the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI)v and GAVI, The Vaccine Alliance.

Baby receiving vaccine
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
Jawad, 13 months old, came with his caregivers to receive his Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) at a UNICEF-supported health centre in Sadad, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria, as part of the national immunization campaign against polio.
Baby receiving vaccine
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
Ayham, 1 month old, gets his due vaccines at a health centre in Sadad, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria, after having received the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV), as part of the national immunization campaign against polio. “We couldn’t bring him to take his routine vaccines as soon as he was born, so we rushed into the canter after we heard of this campaign,” says his mother.
Girl receiving vaccind
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
Amani, 4 years old, receives her Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) from a health mobile team volunteer in Quaryatayn, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria.

Prior to and during the campaign, UNICEF-supported community outreach volunteers and health workers went on awareness household visits and held group sessions, raising the awareness of families on the importance of the vaccine. UNICEF-supported volunteers also shared informative messages on the streets and engaged with doctors and local community figures about polio and the safety of the vaccine.

Health worker marking boy's finger
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
Mohammad, 4 years old, receives his Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) in Maheen, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria. In 2013, his family fled the violence in Maheen for shelter in Rukban, remote desert camp by the Syrian Jordanian border. With subsiding violence in 2019, the family returned home to Maheen. “I was coming to the centre for the children’s medical checkup, and I found out about the campaign, so Mohammad got his vaccine against polio,” says his mother

In Homs, the campaign provided more than 178,000 children up to five years with the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV), in some 160 fixed health centres and through over 30 mobile teams, supported by more than 800 health workers across the governorate.

women and children walking next to UNICEF vehicle
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
Children leave with their mothers a UNICEF-supported health centre in Maheen, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria, after having received their Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) as part of the national immunization campaign against polio that took place on 10-14 October 2021.
Health worker marking boy's finger
UNICEF/Syria/2021/Abdulaziz Aldroubi
“I learned about the national immunization campaign against polio from social media,” says the mother of Elias, 3.5 years old, as he get his pinky finger marked after having received his Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) at a UNICEF-supported health centre in Sadad, southeastern rural Homs, central Syria.