2015
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiv545
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The Journalists Initiatives on Immunisation Against Polio and Improved Acceptance of the Polio Vaccine in Northern Nigeria 2007–2015

Abstract: Background. The polio eradication initiative had major setbacks in 2003 and 2007 due to media campaigns in which renowned scholars and Islamic clerics criticized polio vaccines. The World Health Organization (WHO) partnered with journalists in 2007 to form the Journalists Initiatives on Immunisation Against Polio (JAP), to develop communication initiatives aimed at highlighting polio eradication activities and the importance of immunization in northern Nigeria.Methods. We evaluated the impact of JAP activities… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…That is, irrespective of the low level of education in much of the general public in Africa, health-related education campaigns can have substantial impacts. Some successful examples are in HIV disease (26), polio (27, 28), and guinea worm (29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That is, irrespective of the low level of education in much of the general public in Africa, health-related education campaigns can have substantial impacts. Some successful examples are in HIV disease (26), polio (27, 28), and guinea worm (29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 In Nigeria the association between press release content and Polio vaccine acceptance has been assessed; since the creation of the JAP (Journalists Initiatives on Immunisation Against Polio) in 2007, more than 500 reports have been published with consequent improvements in the acceptance of polio vaccine in northern Nigeria. 28 Immunization polices in Italy have been actively changing since 2015 reaching important milestones, including the National Immunization Prevention Plan 9 and the new law on mandatory immunization. 16 This process has been accompanied by a lively political and societal-level debate on the issue which has been reflected in large media coverage and general population access to correct and evidencebased information.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, 82% of local government areas met both core surveillance indicators annually. Throughout northern Nigeria, government officials and partners engaged traditional leaders and associations such as the Federation of Muslim Women's Associations in Nigeria, 18 youth groups against polio, 19 The Journalists Initiatives on Immunisation Against Polio, 20 and groups of polio survivors, community health workers, and traditional birth attendants, who used their networks to advocate, engage, and sensitise communities to advance polio immunisation efforts. In Borno State, Nigeria, special surveillance and immunisation initiatives were introduced, including recruiting community informants residing in inaccessible areas who regularly report cases of acute flaccid paralysis and have ongoing contact with adjacent secured areas in which surveillance activities have been intensified; taking stool samples from contacts and healthy children residing in or escaping from inaccessible areas; and the creation of the Reaching Inaccessible Communities initiative, a partnership between the polio programme and the Nigerian military to improve the reach of immunisation and surveillance activities in areas truly inaccessible to the polio programme.…”
Section: The Road To Certificationmentioning
confidence: 99%