Part of the problem is that public health programmes have been devolved to the provinces under the Eighteenth Amendment. This means that the federal government’s role in these programmes is minimal, which explains the contrast between the performances of the different provinces. The more inefficient a province is, the more likely such infectious diseases will spread in those areas. International organisations try to make up the difference but are forced to work with the provinces. Resources for such programmes, however, are not allocated equally and depend on the interests of provincial governments. This makes it harder for international organisations, as they have to convince their governments to deal with these public health problems.
There is also a mistrust of vaccinations, which needs to be overcome. The propaganda of religious leaders, who see vaccinations as part of an American plot to make our children barren, has particular effect in low-income, low-information areas. Overcoming this has proved to be difficult, considering the threats posed to the lives of those who administer vaccines. Public information programmes have not had the desired effect. The provincial governments need to pass laws making vaccinations mandatory. Refusing to get your children vaccinated hurts everyone in the area as the entire population can become susceptible to this disease.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 14th, 2013.
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