As countries across the globe introduced rotavirus vaccines, study after study have reinforced their value for money and national health impacts.
Nicaragua: Changing the conversation on rotavirus 3
In 2006, Nicaragua introduced the rotavirus vaccine through a unique public-private partnership. The introduction in Nicaragua, which had a high mortality and morbidity associated with rotavirus, marked the first time a vaccine was introduced in a high-income
and a low-income country in the same year.
But the introduction was also a game-changer in another way: it brought the connection between rotavirus and the broader problem of diarrheal disease into the spotlight. Many health care workers in Nicaragua were initially unfamiliar with rotavirus, but they quickly understood that the vaccine could prevent seasonal diarrhea outbreaks, said Evan Simpson, Global Director, Vaccine Implementation at PATH. “They became our biggest champions for the vaccine, because they knew on a very personal level what this was about,” Simpson said.
Nicaragua’s introduction did more than just save lives and prevent cases in the country itself: it put rotavirus into context for health care workers, governments, and advocates, showing how the vaccine fit into a package of other diarrhea interventions like oral rehydration
solution (ORS) and zinc. Nicaragua’s example helped make the case in other countries for vaccine introduction, and it showed the feasibility of quickly introducing a new vaccine in a low-income country.
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