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UNICEF congratulates China on success in protecting children from hepatitis B

24/07/2015

Beijing, 24 July 2015 – On the eve of the World Hepatitis Day marked on the 28 July, UNICEF congratulates the Government of China on its dramatic success in hepatitis B prevention, which protects babies from being infected with the disease. Meanwhile, it urges the Government to continue to protect children from the viral infection through maintaining a strong public national immunization programme. 

New data released by China's health authority reveals that the dramatic scale up of vaccination coverage and prevention of the transmission of hepatitis B from mother to child have helped to protect millions of children from suffering from this life long and chronic disease.

Hepatitis B, which is a major global health problem, can lead to acute illness or chronic disease, which puts people at risk of developing life-threatening liver cancer or cirrhosis of the liver. 

According to World Health Organization, children less than six years of age who become infected with the hepatitis B virus are the most likely to develop chronic infections.[1] All infants should receive hepatitis B vaccination within 24 hours after birth, followed by two more doses during infancy.

The third nationwide survey on hepatitis B serology released this week showed that only 0.32 per cent of children under 5 years of age are infected with hepatitis B, a two third decline from 0.96 per cent in 2006. This means China has not only achieved the interim milestone of reducing hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) to 2% in five year old children by 2012, but also the final regional goal for the Western Pacific of reducing HBsAg to below 1%. The decline in the older age groups is also impressive.

"Since in Asia most of the transmission of hepatitis B virus happens from a mother, who carries the virus to her newborn, or at a young age, this is an extraordinary success.  The results illustrate the critical importance of investing in a strong public vaccination program," said Dr. Robert Scherpbier, Chief of Health, Nutrition and WASH at UNICEF China. "Today, we can celebrate that millions of children in China are healthy and have avoided living with this disease." 

A girl cries while being vaccinated against Hepatitis A, at Sichuan University in Chengdu, the provincial capital.©UNICEF/NYHQ2008-0571/Dean
A girl cries while being vaccinated at Sichuan University in Chengdu, the provincial capital.

Since 2002, when the hepatitis B vaccine was introduced into the routine immunization program across the country, the national coverage for newborns rose from just 22 percent in 1992 to over 90% per cent in 2013, preventing an estimated 80 million new infections with the hepatitis B virus and 19 million already infected people from progressing to chronic hepatitis B infection up to 2006. 

UNICEF is working with counterparts to promote hospital delivery especially in the most remote areas so as to ensure timely hepatitis B vaccination for newborns. It is also committed to deliver immunization services to children in hard-to-reach regions and vulnerable communities who need it the most.

About UNICEF
UNICEF promotes the rights and wellbeing of every child, in everything we do.  Together with our partners, we work in 190 countries and territories to translate that commitment into practical action, focusing special effort on reaching the most vulnerable and excluded children, to the benefit of all children, everywhere.  For more information about UNICEF and its work visit: www.unicef.org

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For further information, please contact:
Shantha Bloemen, UNICEF China, +8610 85312610, sbloemen@unicef.org 
Liu Li, UNICEF China, +8610 85312612, liliu@unicef.org
 


[1]World Health Organization, Fact sheet N°204, 2015

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