FG, Kwara spend N1bn on vaccines, equipment

Agbaje Matthew
3 Min Read
Map of Kwara State

The Federal Government together with Kwara State government has spent one billion naira on vaccines and health equipment.

Dr Michael Oguntoye who is Director to the State Primary Health Care Development Agency said the Federal and Kwara State Governments have spent N1 billion on vaccines and equipment in Ilorin on Saturday.

Oguntoye told the Newsmen that the Global Alliance for Vaccine and Immunisation (GAVI) was also involved in the procurement of the vaccine equipment.

The director said that vaccines cold chain equipment that would be operating on solar direct drive in Kwara had been installed across the 117 electoral wards in the state.

“This 117 is just the first tranche of the cold chain equipment, another tranche is coming as the second batch.

“By the time the second tranche comes before the year runs out, all the other wards that don’t have cold chain equipment will have.

“So the strategy is that in every ward, across the state, there should be at least one functional cold chain equipment that can be used to store vaccines.

“This is to make vaccines available and make potent and efficacious vaccines available to the end-users,” he said.

According to him, the vaccine equipment has been deployed to primary, secondary, and tertiary healthcare facilities inwards.

Oguntoye said that the equipment would offer solutions to the challenges of insufficient vaccines as well as a gap in the supply chain, and make vaccines readily available to children and communities in the state.

This will in turn help prevention of vaccine-preventable diseases and by extension reduce out of pocket expenditures on the part of parents and caregivers,” he said.

The expert in epidemic diseases said that the state government and its partners had found the need to increase performance, efficiency, and coverage in reaching every eligible child for immunisation.

He added that apart from the normal vaccines, new vaccines were being introduced, which had additional challenges on the existing cold chain capacity.

Oguntoye said that new vaccines needed to be properly stored under ideal condition, adding the storage had to do with specialised equipment powered by electricity.

According to him, electricity in the country is a challenge, coupled with the fact that cold chain equipment is very expensive, not readily available and requires a lot for maintenance.

“This is the reason why the state government and partners procured the equipment, in order to equip primary healthcare centres and wards including secondary and tertiary healthcare facilities,” he said.

 

 

NAN

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