United Nations in Pakistan

04/29/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/29/2026 00:28

Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 24 April 2026

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Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 24 April 2026
Press Release

Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 24 April 2026

29 April 2026

UNICEF, WHO & GAVI

JOINT PRESS RELEASE

Largest catch-up initiative delivers over 100 million childhood vaccinations

  • The Big Catch-Up, launched during World Immunization Week 2023, has delivered over 100 million vaccine doses to an estimated 18.3 million children across 36 countries.
  • Around 12.3 million were "zero-dose children" who had not previously received any vaccines and 15 million who had never received a measles vaccine.
  • The initiative concluded in March 2026 and is on track to meet its target of catching up 21 million children - but agencies warn that many infants still miss out on lifesaving vaccines through routine immunization every year.

GENEVA/NEW YORK, 24 April 2026 - The Big Catch-Up (BCU), a historic multi-year, multi-country effort to address vaccination declines driven largely by the COVID-19 pandemic, has reached an estimated 18.3 million children aged 1 to 5 across 36 countries with more than 100 million doses of life-saving vaccines, helping to narrow critical immunity gaps, announced Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance (Gavi), WHO, and UNICEF at the start of World Immunization Week.

Of the 18.3 million children reached between 2023 and 2025, an estimated

12.3 million were "zero-dose children" who had not yet received a vaccine and 15 million had never received a measles vaccine. BCU also provided 23 million doses of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) to un- and under-vaccinated children, an essential intervention to reach polio eradication. Programme

implementation concluded on 31 March 2026. Although final data is still being compiled, the global initiative is forecasted to be on track to meet its target of reaching at least 21 million un- and under-immunized children.

However, agencies warn that while catch-up vaccination is an important strategy for closing immunization gaps, expanding the reach of routine immunization programmes remains the most effective and sustainable way to protect children and prevent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases.

Addressing the vaccine equity gap

Beyond pandemic recovery, the BCU initiative focused on closing the vaccine equity gap. Millions of children every year miss the essential vaccinations they should receive before the age of one. Most of them live in fragile, conflict-affected, or underserved communities and are never caught up as they grow older.

The 36 participating BCU countries across Africa and Asia currently account for 60% of all zero-dose worldwide. Pandemic-related immunization programme disruptions exacerbated this issue, and, in these countries, added millions more zero-dose children to those who already chronically miss out. To address this issue, the Big Catch-Up looked beyond infant immunization, for the first-time ever systematically leveraging routine immunization systems to make deep inroads into the accumulated global cohort of older children between the ages of 1 to 5 - "older" because they should have received critical routine vaccines before the age of 1 - who remain vulnerable due to missed vaccinations.

BCU catalyzed long-lasting systems to identify, screen, vaccinate and monitor coverage rates in these older children - including updates to policies on age eligibility. Countries also oriented and trained health workers to identify, screen and vaccinate missed children as part of routine care and engaged with communities and civil society to support catch-up efforts. By expanding the reach of immunization to millions of previously missed children and their communities, and investing in systemic improvements, the BCU drive has made it easier for the countries to ensure these populations and others like them continue to receive essential health and immunization services in the future.

Among the participating countries, 12 countries (Burkina Faso, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritania, Niger, Pakistan, Somalia, Togo, United Republic of Tanzania, and Zambia) reported

reaching more than 60% of all zero-dose children under the age of 5 who had previously missed DTP1. In Ethiopia, more than 2.5 million previously zero-dose children received DTP1. The country also delivered nearly 5 million doses of IPV and more than 4 million doses of measles vaccine, among other key vaccines, to un- and under-vaccinated children. Countries outside this group also reached large numbers of children. In Nigeria, for example, 2 million previously zero-dose children were reached with DTP1, and 3.4 million doses of IPV were administered alongside millions of doses of other vaccines.

While these 36 countries received Gavi funding and technical assistance from WHO and UNICEF through BCU, many other countries also implemented activities during this period to accelerate efforts to catch-up missed children and recover immunization services following pandemic-related backsliding.

"As the largest ever international effort to reach missed children with life-saving vaccines, the Big Catch-Up shows what is possible when governments, partners and communities work together to protect the most vulnerable in society," said Dr Sania Nishtar, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. "Thanks to this accomplishment, not only are millions of children now protected from preventable diseases but so are their communities, for generations to come."

"By protecting children who missed out on vaccinations because of disruptions to health services caused by COVID-19, the Big Catch-up has helped to undo one of the pandemic's major negative consequences," said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization. "The success of the Big Catch-up is a testament to health workers and national immunization programmes, which are now better equipped to find and vaccinate children missed by routine services."

"Vaccinations save lives," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. "This initiative shows what's possible when countries have the resources, tools, and political will to reach children with lifesaving vaccines. We've caught up with some of the children who missed routine vaccinations during the pandemic - but many more remain out of reach. The gains made through the Big Catch-Up must be sustained through investment in strong, reliable immunization systems, especially at a time where measles is resurging."

Looking at the challenges ahead

Through the Big Catch-Up, for the first time ever, countries and global partners successfully reached 12.3 million "older" zero dose children between the ages of 1 to 5. However, in 2024, an estimated 14.3 million infants under the age of one globally failed to receive a single vaccine through routine immunization programmes. Despite BCU demonstrating progress is possible with leadership and targeted investment and support, lowering this annual number of infants who miss out will require building systems that consistently reach the hardest to reach communities - against a backdrop of rising birth cohorts, conflict and displacement, funding cuts, and strained health systems.

The consequences of chronic gaps in routine immunization are plain to see. Measles outbreaks, for example, are rising in every region with around 11 million cases in 2024, and the number of countries facing large outbreaks has almost tripled since 2021. This surge is driven by persistent gaps in measles vaccination through routine immunization programmes, compounded by declining vaccine confidence in some previously high-coverage communities.

Large-scale catch-up efforts are resource intensive and should serve only as a gap-filling measure that is complementary to routine immunization. Timely vaccination according to national immunization schedules provides optimal protection and continues to be the most sustainable way to safeguard children and communities.

For every generation, vaccines work

WHO, UNICEF, and Gavi, along with countries and communities, are marking World Immunization Week (24-30 April 2026) with a joint campaign, "For every generation, vaccines work," calling on countries to sustain and expand vaccination coverage at every age. At the midpoint of the Immunization Agenda2030 (IA2030), and central to Gavi's 2026-2030 strategy (Gavi 6.0), the priority remains the same: reaching zero-dose children and advancing equity in the hardest-to-reach communities, particularly in countries grappling with conflict, instability, or fragile health systems. Maintaining that momentum will require expanding long-term domestic investments in immunization programmes and reliable commitments from partners and donors.

# # # # #

Notes to Editors:

In Pakistan, 2 million previously zero-dose children are protected, 3.7 million have first doses of measles vaccine, and 5.9 million have routine polio vaccine.

Detailed media factsheet on BCU activities here. Download photos and broll here.

WHO catch up immunization

The Big Catch-Up: An Essential Immunization Recovery Plan for 2023 and Beyond

About Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance is a public-private partnership that helps vaccinate more than half the world's children against some of the world's deadliest diseases. The Vaccine Alliance brings together developing country and donor governments, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, the World Bank, the vaccine industry, technical agencies, civil society, the Gates Foundation and other private sector partners. View the full list of donor governments and other leading organisations that fund Gavi's work here.

Since its inception in 2000, Gavi has helped to immunise a whole generation - over 1.2 billion children - and prevented more than 20.6 million future deaths, helping to halve child mortality in 78 lower-income countries. Gavi also plays a key role in improving global health security by supporting health systems as well as funding global stockpiles for Ebola, cholera, meningococcal and yellow fever vaccines. After two decades of progress, Gavi is now focused on protecting the next generation, above all the zero-dose children who have not received even a single vaccine shot. The Vaccine Alliance employs innovative finance and the latest technology - from drones to biometrics - to save lives, prevent outbreaks before they can spread and help countries on the road to self-sufficiency. Learn more at www.gavi.org and connect with us on Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, X and YouTube.

About UNICEF

UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, works to protect the rights of every child, everywhere, especially the most disadvantaged children and in the toughest places to reach. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we do whatever it takes to help children survive, thrive, and fulfil their potential.

For more information about UNICEF and its work, please visit: www.unicef.org Follow UNICEF on X (Twitter), Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube

About WHO

Dedicated to the health and well-being of all people and guided by science, the World Health Organization leads and champions global efforts to give everyone, everywhere, an equal chance at a safe and healthy life. We are the UN agency for health. We connect nations, partners and people on the front lines in 150+ locations - leading the world's response to health emergencies, preventing disease, addressing the root causes of health issues and expanding access to medicines and health care. Our mission is to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable. www.who.int

For more information, please contact:

Meg Sharafudeen | Gavi | [email protected]

Cirũ Kariũki | Gavi | [email protected]

Sara Alhattab | UNICEF New York | [email protected] WHO media | [email protected]

ﺣﻔﺎظﺗﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم ره ﺟﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽﻣﮩم ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت

10 ﮐروڑ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﻓراﮨم ﮐر دی ﮔﺋﯾں

· ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮨﻔﺗہ 2023ﮐﮯ دوران ﺷروع ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯽ ﻣﮩم 'دی ﺑﮓ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ'ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت 36 ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﻣﯾں ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 1 ﮐروڑ 83 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﮐﯽ 10 ﮐروڑ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯾں۔

· ان ﻣﯾں ﺳﮯ ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 1 ﮐروڑ 23 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼﮯ اﯾﺳﮯ ﺗﮭﮯ ﺟﻧﮩﯾں اس ﺳﮯ ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﮐوﺋﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ ﺟﺑﮑہ 1 ﮐروڑ 50 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﺧﺳره ﮐﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺑﮭﯽ ﮐﺑﮭﯽ ﻧﮩﯾں دی ﮔﺋﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ۔

· ﻣﺎرچ 2026 ﻣﯾں ﻣﮑﻣل ﮨوﻧﮯ واﻻ ﯾہ اﻗدام اﻧدازاً 2 ﮐروڑ 10 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﮐﮯ اﭘﻧﮯ ﮨدف ﮐﯽ ﺟﺎﻧب ﮔﺎﻣزن ﮨﮯ، ﺗﺎﮨم اداروں ﻧﮯ ﺧﺑردار ﮐﯾﺎ ﮨﮯ ﮐہ ﮨر ﺳﺎل اب ﺑﮭﯽ ﻻﮐﮭوں ﺑﭼﮯ ﻣﻌﻣول ﮐﮯ ﺣﻔﺎظﺗﯽ ﮢﯾﮑوں ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم ره ﺟﺎﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔

ﺟﻧﯾوا/ﻧﯾوﯾﺎرک، 24اﭘرﯾل 2026 - ﮐووڈ19- وﺑﺎ ﮐﮯ ﺑﺎﻋث ﺑﭼوں ﮐﯽ ﺣﻔﺎظﺗﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮐﮯ ﻋﻣل ﻣﯾںﭘﯾدا ﮨوﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ ﮐﻣﯽ ﮐو ﭘورا ﮐرﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﺷروع ﮐﯾﮯ ﮔﺋﮯ ﺗﺎرﯾﺧﯽ، ﮐﺛﯾر ﻣﻠﮑﯽ اور طوﯾلاﻟﻣدﺗﯽ

اﻗدام ،دی ﺑﮓ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپCatch-Up) Big (The ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت 2023 ﺳﮯ 2025 ﮐﮯ دوران 36 ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ

ﻣﯾں اﯾﮏ ﺳﮯ ﭘﺎﻧﭻ ﺳﺎل ﮐﯽ ﻋﻣر ﮐﮯ ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 1 ﮐروڑ 83 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو زﻧدﮔﯽ ﺑﭼﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﮐﯽ 10 ﮐروڑ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯾں۔ ﯾہ اﻋﻼن ﮔﺎوی وﯾﮑﺳﯾن اﻻﺋﻧس(Gavi) ، ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت اور ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﻧﮯ ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮨﻔﺗہ ﮐﮯ آﻏﺎز ﭘر ﮐﯾﺎ۔

ان ﺑﭼوں ﻣﯾں ﺳﮯ ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 1 ﮐروڑ 23 ﻻﮐﮭ اﯾﺳﮯ ﺗﮭﮯ ﺟﻧﮩﯾں ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﮐﺑﮭﯽ ﮐوﺋﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں دی ﮔﺋﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ ﺟﺑﮑہ 1 ﮐروڑ 50 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﺧﺳره ﮐﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ۔ اس اﻗدام ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت 2 ﮐروڑ 30 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﻏﯾر ﻓﻌﺎل ﭘوﻟﯾو وﯾﮑﺳﯾن (IPV) ﮐﯽ ﺑﮭﯽ ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯾں ﺗﺎﮐہ ﻣﮑﻣل ﯾﺎ ﺟزوی طور ﭘر ﻣﺣروم

ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ ﭘوﻟﯾو ﮐﮯ ﺧﺎﺗﻣﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﺿروری وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎﺋﯽ ﺟﺎ ﺳﮑﮯ۔ ﭘروﮔرام 31 ﻣﺎرچ 2026 ﮐو

ﻣﮑﻣل ﮨوا۔ ﺣﺗﻣﯽ اﻋداد و ﺷﻣﺎر ﻣرﺗب ﮐﯾﮯ ﺟﺎ رﮨﮯ ﮨﯾں، ﺗﺎﮨم اﻧدازه ﮨﮯ ﮐہ ﯾہ ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ﻣﮩم ﮐم از ﮐم 2 ﮐروڑ 10 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺗﮏ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ دﯾﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ اﭘﻧﮯ ﮨدف ﮐﮯ ﻗرﯾب ﮨﮯ۔ﺗﺎﮨم اداروں ﻧﮯ ﺧﺑردار ﮐﯾﺎ ﮨﮯ ﮐہ اﮔرﭼہ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن اﮨم ﮨﮯ، ﻟﯾﮑن ﻣﻌﻣول ﮐﮯ ﺣﻔﺎظﺗﯽ ﮢﯾﮑہ ﺟﺎت ﮐﮯ ﭘروﮔراﻣوں ﮐو وﺳﻌت دﯾﻧﺎ ﺑﭼوں ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣﻔظ اور ﺑﯾﻣﺎرﯾوں ﮐﯽ روک ﺗﮭﺎم ﮐﺎ ﺳب ﺳﮯ ﻣؤﺛر اور ﭘﺎﺋﯾدار طرﯾﻘہ ﮨﮯ۔

وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺗﮏ ﻣﺳﺎوی رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﻣﯾںﺣﺎﺋل رﮐﺎوﮢوں ﮐﺎ ﺧﺎﺗﻣہ

ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ وﺑﺎ ﺳﮯ ﺑﺣﺎﻟﯽ ﮐﮯ ﻋﻼوه اساﻗدام ﮐﺎ ﻣﻘﺻد وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺗﮏ ﻣﺳﺎوی رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﮐﮯ ﺧﻼ ﮐو ﮐم ﮐرﻧﺎ ﺑﮭﯽ ﺗﮭﺎ۔ ﮨر ﺳﺎل ﻻﮐﮭوں ﺑﭼﮯ وه ﺿروری وﯾﮑﺳﯾﻧز ﺣﺎﺻل ﻧﮩﯾں ﮐر ﭘﺎﺗﮯ ﺟو اﻧﮩﯾں اﯾﮏ ﺳﺎل ﮐﯽ ﻋﻣر ﺳﮯ ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﻣﻠﻧﯽ ﭼﺎﮨﺋﯾں۔ ان ﻣﯾں ﺳﮯ زﯾﺎده ﺗر ﺑﭼﮯ ﮐﻣزور، ﺗﻧﺎزﻋﺎت ﺳﮯ ﻣﺗﺎﺛره ﯾﺎ ﭘﺳﻣﺎﻧده ﺧﺎﻧداﻧوں ﻣﯾں رﮨﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں اور ﻋﻣر ﺑڑھﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﺳﺎﺗﮭ ﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم رﮨﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔

اﻓرﯾﻘہ اور اﯾﺷﯾﺎ ﮐﮯ 36ﺷرﯾﮏ ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﻣﯾں دﻧﯾﺎ ﺑﮭر ﮐﮯ 60 ﻓﯾﺻد اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼﮯ رﮨﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں ﺟﻧﮩﯾں ﮐﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ۔ وﺑﺎ ﮐﮯ دوران وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﭘروﮔراﻣوں ﮐﯽ راه ﻣﯾں ﺣﺎﺋل رﮐﺎوﮢوں ﻧﮯ اس ﻣﺳﺋﻠﮯ ﮐو ﻣزﯾد ﭘﯾﭼﯾده ﮐﯾﺎ اور ﻻﮐﮭوں ﻧﺋﮯ ﺑﭼﮯ اس زﻣرے ﻣﯾں ﺷﺎﻣل ﮨو ﮔﺋﮯ۔ اس ﻣﺳﺋﻠﮯ ﮐﮯ ﺣل ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ دی ﺑﮓ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت ﭘﮩﻠﯽ ﺑﺎر اﯾﮏ ﺳﮯ ﭘﺎﻧﭻ ﺳﺎل ﮐﯽ ﻋﻣر ﮐﮯ ان ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ ﭘﮩﻧﭼﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﻣﻌﻣول ﮐﮯ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﻧظﺎم ﮐو اﺳﺗﻌﻣﺎل ﮐﯾﺎ ﺟو اﭘﻧﯽ ﻋﻣر ﮐﮯ اﺑﺗداﺋﯽ ﺳﺎل ﻣﯾں وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم ره ﮔﺋﮯ ﺗﮭﮯ اور اب ﺑﮭﯽ ﺧطرے ﺳﮯ دوﭼﺎر ﮨﯾں۔

اس اﻗدام ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﮐﯽ ﻧﺷﺎﻧدﮨﯽ، ﺟﺎﻧﭻ، وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن اور ﻧﮕراﻧﯽ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﻣﺿﺑوط ﻧظﺎم ﻗﺎﺋم ﮐﯾﮯ ﮔﺋﮯ، ﺟن ﻣﯾں ﻋﻣر ﮐﯽ اﮨﻠﯾت ﺳﮯ ﻣﺗﻌﻠﻖ ﭘﺎﻟﯾﺳﯾوں ﻣﯾں ﺗﺑدﯾﻠﯽ ﺑﮭﯽ ﺷﺎﻣل ﮨﮯ۔اس ﺳﻠﺳﻠﮯ ﻣﯾں ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﻋﻣﻠﮯ ﮐو ﺗرﺑﯾت دی ﮔﺋﯽ اور ﮐﻣﯾوﻧﮢﯾز و ﺳول ﺳوﺳﺎﺋﮢﯽ ﮐو ﺷﺎﻣل ﮐﯾﺎ ﮔﯾﺎ ﺗﺎﮐہ ان ﺑﭼوں ﮐﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾﻧز ﺗﮏ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﻣﻣﮑن ﮨو ﺳﮑﮯ۔اس ﮐﮯ ﻧﺗﯾﺟﮯ ﻣﯾں ﻧہ ﺻرف ﻻﮐﮭوں ﺑﭼوں ﮐو وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯽ ﺑﻠﮑہ ﻣﺳﺗﻘﺑل ﻣﯾں ﺑﮭﯽ ان ﮐﻣﯾوﻧﮢﯾز ﺗﮏ ﺻﺣت اور وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﺧدﻣﺎت ﮐﯽ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﮐو آﺳﺎن ﺑﻧﺎﯾﺎ ﮔﯾﺎ۔

ﺷرﯾﮏ ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﻣﯾں ﺳﮯ 12 ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﺑﺷﻣول ﺑرﮐﯾﻧﺎ ﻓﺎﺳو، ﺷﻣﺎﻟﯽ ﮐورﯾﺎ، اﯾﺗﮭوﭘﯾﺎ، ﮐﯾﻧﯾﺎ، ﻣڈﻏﺎﺳﮑر، ﻣورﯾطﺎﻧﯾہ، ﻧﺎﺋﺟر، ﭘﺎﮐﺳﺗﺎن، ﺻوﻣﺎﻟﯾہ، ﮢوﮔو، ﺗﻧزاﻧﯾہ اور زﯾﻣﺑﯾﺎ ﻧﮯ ﭘﺎﻧﭻ ﺳﺎل ﺳﮯ ﮐم ﻋﻣر اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﻣﯾں ﺳﮯ 60 ﻓﯾﺻد ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺗﮏ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎﺋﯽ ،ﺟﻧﮩﯾں ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ڈی ﭘﯽ ﮢﯽ آﺋﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ۔اﯾﺗﮭوﭘﯾﺎ ﻣﯾں 25 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﭘﮩﻠﯽ ﺑﺎر ڈی ﭘﯽ ﮢﯽ آﺋﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن دی ﮔﺋﯽ، ﺟﺑﮑہ ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 50 ﻻﮐﮭ آﺋﯽ ﭘﯽ وی اور 40 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺧﺳره وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﮐﯽ ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﺑﮭﯽ ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯾں۔ ﻧﺎﺋﺟﯾرﯾﺎ ﻣﯾں ﺑﮭﯽ 20 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ڈی ﭘﯽ ﮢﯽ آﺋﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن دی ﮔﺋﯽ اور 34 ﻻﮐﮭ آﺋﯽ ﭘﯽ وی ﺧوراﮐﯾں ﻓراﮨم ﮐﯽ ﮔﺋﯾں۔

اﮔرﭼہ ان 36ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﮐو ﮔﺎوی ﮐﯽ ﻣﺎﻟﯽ ﻣﻌﺎوﻧت اور ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت و ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﮐﯽ ﺗﮑﻧﯾﮑﯽ ﻣدد ﺣﺎﺻل ﺗﮭﯽ، ﺗﺎﮨم دﯾﮕر ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﻧﮯ ﺑﮭﯽ اس ﻋرﺻﮯ ﮐﮯ دوران وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮐﮯ ﺧﻼ ﮐو ﮐم ﮐرﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ اﻗداﻣﺎت ﮐﯾﮯ۔

ﮔﺎوی ﮐﯽ ﺳﯽ ای او ڈاﮐﮢر ﺛﺎﻧﯾہ ﻧﺷﺗر ﻧﮯ ﮐﮩﺎ،''وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم ره ﺟﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ زﻧدﮔﯽ ﺑﭼﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎﻧﮯ ﮐﯽ ﯾہ اب ﺗﮏ ﮐﯽ ﺳب ﺳﮯ ﺑڑی ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ﮐوﺷش ﮨﮯ، ﺟو اس ﺑﺎت ﮐﺎ ﺛﺑوت ﮨﮯ ﮐہ ﺟب ﺣﮑوﻣﺗﯾں، ﺷراﮐت دار اور ﮐﻣﯾوﻧﮢﯾز ﻣل ﮐر ﮐﺎم ﮐرﯾں ﺗو ﮐﭼﮭ ﺑﮭﯽ ﻧﺎ ﻣﻣﮑن ﻧﮩﯾں ﮨﮯ۔ اس ﮐﺎﻣﯾﺎﺑﯽ ﮐﮯ ﻧﺗﯾﺟﮯ ﻣﯾں ﻧہ ﺻرف ﻻﮐﮭوں ﺑﭼﮯ ﺑﻠﮑہ ان ﮐﯽ ﮐﻣﯾوﻧﮢﯾز ﮐﯽ آﺋﻧده آﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ ﻧﺳﻠﯾں ﺑﮭﯽ ﻣﺣﻔوظ ﮨو ﮔﺋﯽ ﮨﯾں۔''

ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ڈاﺋرﯾﮑﮢر ﺟﻧرل، ڈاﮐﮢر ﮢﯾڈروس ادھﺎﻧوم ﮔﯾﺑرﯾﺎﺳس ﻧﮯ ﮐﮩﺎ، ''ﮐووڈ19- ﮐﮯ ﺑﺎﻋث ﺻﺣت ﮐﯽ ﺧدﻣﺎت ﮐﯽ ﻓراﮨﻣﯽ ﻣﯾں رﮐﺎوﮢوں ﮐﯽ وﺟہ ﺳﮯوﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم ره ﺟﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﺗﺣﻔظ ﻓراﮨم ﮐر ﮐﮯ دی ﺑﮓ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ ﻧﮯ وﺑﺎ ﮐﮯ ﺑڑے ﻣﻧﻔﯽ اﺛرات ﮐو ﮐم ﮐﯾﺎ ﮨﮯ۔ ﯾہ ﮐﺎﻣﯾﺎﺑﯽ ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﻋﻣﻠﮯ اور ﻗوﻣﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﭘروﮔراﻣوں ﮐﯽ ﺻﻼﺣﯾﺗوں ﮐﺎ ﺛﺑوت ﮨﮯ، ﺟو اب ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﺳﮯ زﯾﺎده ﻣوﺛر اﻧداز ﻣﯾں ﭘﯾﭼﮭﮯ ره ﺟﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ ﭘﮩﻧﭻ ﺳﮑﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔''

ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﮐﯽ اﯾﮕزﯾﮑﮢو ڈاﺋرﯾﮑﮢر ﮐﯾﺗﮭرﯾن رﺳل ﻧﮯ ﮐﮩﺎ، ''وﯾﮑﺳﯾﻧز ﺟﺎﻧﯾں ﺑﭼﺎﺗﯽ ﮨﯾں۔ ﯾہ اﻗدام ظﺎﮨر ﮐرﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ ﮐہ ﺟب ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﮐﮯ ﭘﺎس وﺳﺎﺋل، آﻻت اور ﺳﯾﺎﺳﯽ ﻋزم ﮨو ﺗو وه ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ زﻧدﮔﯽ ﺑﭼﺎﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎ ﺳﮑﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔ ﮨم ﻧﮯ ﮐﭼﮭ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎﺋﯽ ﮨﮯ ، ﻟﯾﮑن ﺑﮩت ﺳﮯ ﺑﭼﮯ اب ﺑﮭﯽﻣﺣروم ﮨﯾں۔ اس ﮐﺎﻣﯾﺎﺑﯽ ﮐو ﺑرﻗرار رﮐﮭﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﻣﺿﺑوط اور ﻗﺎﺑلِ اﻋﺗﻣﺎد وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﻧظﺎم ﻣﯾں ﺳرﻣﺎﯾہ ﮐﺎری ﺿروری ﮨﮯ، ﺑﺎﻟﺧﺻوص اس وﻗت ﮐﯾوﻧﮑہ ﺧﺳره دوﺑﺎره ﺑڑھ رﮨﺎ ﮨﮯ۔''

ﻣﺳﺗﻘﺑل ﮐﯽ ﻣﺷﮑﻼت

اس اﻗدام ﮐﮯ ذرﯾﻌﮯ ﭘﮩﻠﯽ ﺑﺎر 1 ﮐروڑ 23 ﻻﮐﮭ اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘﮩﻧﭼﺎﺋﯽ ﮔﺋﯽ ﺟﻧﮩﯾں ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﮐﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ ﺗﮭﯽ۔ ﺗﺎﮨم 2024 ﻣﯾں دﻧﯾﺎ ﺑﮭر ﻣﯾں 1 ﮐروڑ 43 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺑﭼﮯ اﯾﮏ ﺳﺎل ﮐﯽ ﻋﻣر ﺳﮯ ﭘﮩﻠﮯ ﮐﺳﯽ ﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺳﮯ ﻣﺣروم رﮨﮯ۔اﮔرﭼہ اس اﻗدام ﻧﮯ دﮐﮭﺎﯾﺎ ﮐہ ﭘﯾش رﻓت ﻣﻣﮑن ﮨﮯ، ﻟﯾﮑن ان ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ ﻣﺳﺗﻘل ﺑﻧﯾﺎدوں ﭘر رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ، ﺧﺎص طور ﭘر ﺑڑھﺗﯽ ﮨوﺋﯽ آﺑﺎدی، ﺗﻧﺎزﻋﺎت، ﻣﺎﻟﯽ ﺗﻌﺎون ﻣﯾں ﮐﻣﯽ اور ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ دﺑﺎؤ ﮐﮯ ﺗﻧﺎظر ﻣﯾں ﻣﺿﺑوط ﻧظﺎم، وﺳﺎﺋل، اور اﺳﺗﺣﮑﺎم درﮐﺎر ﮨوﮔﺎ۔

ﻣﻌﻣول ﮐﮯ ﺣﻔﺎظﺗﯽ ﮢﯾﮑہ ﺟﺎت ﻣﯾں ﻧہ ﻟﮕواﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻧﺗﺎﺋﺞ واﺿﺢ طور ﭘر ﺳﺎﻣﻧﮯ آ رﮨﮯ ﮨﯾں۔ ﻣﺛﺎل ﮐﮯ طور ﭘر، ﮨر ﺧطﮯ ﻣﯾں ﺧﺳره ﮐﮯ ﭘﮭﯾﻼؤ ﻣﯾں اﺿﺎﻓہ ﮨو رﮨﺎ ﮨﮯ، ﺟﮩﺎں 2024 ﻣﯾں ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً 1 ﮐروڑ 10 ﻻﮐﮭ ﮐﯾﺳز رﭘورٹ ﮨوﺋﮯ، ﺟﺑﮑہ 2021 ﮐﮯ ﺑﻌد ﺳﮯ ﺑڑے ﭘﯾﻣﺎﻧﮯ ﭘر ﭘﮭﯾﻼؤ ﮐﺎ ﺳﺎﻣﻧﺎ ﮐرﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﮐﯽ ﺗﻌداد ﺗﻘرﯾﺑﺎً ﺗﯾن ﮔﻧﺎ ﮨو ﭼﮑﯽ ﮨﮯ۔ اس اﺿﺎﻓﮯ ﮐﯽ ﺑﻧﯾﺎدی وﺟہ ﻣﻌﻣول ﮐﮯ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﭘروﮔراﻣز ﮐﮯ ذرﯾﻌﮯ ﺧﺳره ﮐﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧہ ﻟﮕواﻧﺎ ﮨﮯ، ﺟﺑﮑہ ﺑﻌض اﯾﺳﮯ ﻣﻌﺎﺷروں ﻣﯾں وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﭘر اﻋﺗﻣﺎد ﻣﯾں ﮐﻣﯽ ﮨوﺋﯽ ﮨﮯ ، ﺟﮩﺎں ﭘﮩﻠﮯ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮐﯽ ﺷرح زﯾﺎده ﺗﮭﯽ۔

ﺑڑے ﭘﯾﻣﺎﻧﮯ ﭘر ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ ﻣﮩﻣﺎت ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﺑﮩت زﯾﺎده وﺳﺎﺋل ﭼﺎﮨﺋﯾں ، اس ﻟﯾﮯ اﻧﮩﯾں ﺻرف اس ﺧﻼ ﮐو ﭘُر ﮐرﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ اﯾﮏ ﺗﮑﻣﯾﻠﯽ اﻗدام ﮐﮯ طورﭘر اﺳﺗﻌﻣﺎل ﮐﯾﺎ ﺟﺎﻧﺎ ﭼﺎﮨﯾﮯ۔ ﻗوﻣﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﺷﯾڈول ﮐﮯ ﻣطﺎﺑﻖ ﺑروﻗت وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮨﯽ ﺑﮩﺗرﯾن ﺗﺣﻔظ ﻓراﮨم ﮐرﺗﯽ ﮨﮯ اور ﺑﭼوں اور ﮐﻣﯾوﻧﮢﯾز ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣﻔظ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﺳب ﺳﮯ ﭘﺎﺋﯾدار طرﯾﻘہ ﮐﺎر ﮨﮯ۔

ﮨر ﻧﺳل ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻣؤﺛر ﮨﯾں

ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮨﻔﺗہ 24) ﺗﺎ 30 اﭘرﯾل (2026 ﮐﮯ ﻣوﻗﻊ ﭘر ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت، ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف اور ﮔﺎوی ﻧﮯ ﻣﺷﺗرﮐہ ﻣﮩم ''ﮨر ﻧﺳل ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ وﯾﮑﺳﯾﻧز ﻣؤﺛر ﮨﯾں'' ﺷروع ﮐﯽ ﮨﮯ، ﺟس ﮐﺎ ﻣﻘﺻد ﮨر ﻋﻣر ﻣﯾں وﯾﮑﺳﯽ ﻧﯾﺷن ﮐﯽ ﮐورﯾﺞ ﮐو ﺑڑھﺎﻧﺎ ﮨﮯ۔ اﻣﯾوﻧﺎﺋزﯾﺷن اﯾﺟﻧڈا 2030 ﮐﮯ درﻣﯾﺎﻧﮯ اور ''ﮔﺎوی2026-2030ﻻﺋﺣہ ﻋﻣل )ﮔﺎوی ''(6.0 ﮐﮯ ﻣرﮐزی ﺣﺻﮯ ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت اب ﯾہ ﺗرﺟﯾﺢ ﮨﮯ ﮐہ اﯾﺳﮯ ﺑﭼوں ﺗﮏ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﺣﺎﺻل ﮐﯽ ﺟﺎﺋﮯ ﺟﻧﮩﯾں ﮐﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ، ﺧﺎص طور ﭘر ان ﻋﻼﻗوں ﻣﯾں ﺟﮩﺎں ﺗﻧﺎزﻋﺎت، ﻋدم اﺳﺗﺣﮑﺎم اور ﮐﻣزور ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﻣﺳﺎﺋل ﻣوﺟود ﮨﯾں۔ اس رﻓﺗﺎر ﮐو ﺑرﻗرار رﮐﮭﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﻣﻘﺎﻣﯽ ﺳرﻣﺎﯾہ ﮐﺎری اور ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ﺷراﮐت داروں ﮐﯽ ﻣﺳﻠﺳل ﺣﻣﺎﯾت ﺿروری ﮨﮯ۔

ﻣدﯾر ﺻﺎﺣﺑﺎن ﺳﮯ ﮔزارﺷﺎت

ﺑﯽ ﺳﯽ ﯾو ﺳرﮔرﻣﯾوں ﺳﮯ ﻣﺗﻌﻠﻖ ﺗﻔﺻﯾﻠﯽ ﻣﯾڈﯾﺎ ﻓﯾﮑٹ ﺷﯾٹ ﯾﮩﺎں دﺳﺗﯾﺎب ﮨﮯ۔ ﺗﺻﺎوﯾر اور ﺑﯽ رول ﯾﮩﺎں ﺳﮯ ڈاؤن ﻟوڈ ﮐرﯾں۔ ڈﺑﻠﯾو اﯾﭻ او ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ اﻣﯾوﻧﺎﺋزﯾﺷن

دی ﺑﮓ ﮐﯾﭻ اَپ: 2023اور اس ﮐﮯ ﺑﻌد ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ اﯾﮏ اﮨم اﻣﯾوﻧﺎﺋزﯾﺷن ﺑﺣﺎﻟﯽ ﻣﻧﺻوﺑہ

ﮔﺎوی، دی وﯾﮑﺳﯾن اﻻﺋﻧس ﮐﮯﺑﺎرے ﻣﯾں

ﮔﺎوی، دی وﯾﮑﺳﯾن اﻻﺋﻧس اﯾﮏ ﭘﺑﻠﮏ ﭘراﺋﯾوﯾٹ ﺷراﮐت داری ﮨﮯ ﺟو دﻧﯾﺎ ﺑﮭر ﮐﮯ ﻧﺻف ﺳﮯ زﯾﺎده ﺑﭼوں ﮐو ﻣﮩﻠﮏ ﺑﯾﻣﺎرﯾوں ﮐﮯ ﺧﻼف وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻓراﮨم ﮐرﻧﮯ ﻣﯾں ﻣدد دﯾﺗﯽ ﮨﮯ۔ ﯾہ اﺗﺣﺎد ﺗرﻗﯽ ﭘذﯾر ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ اور ﻋطﯾہ دﮨﻧدﮔﺎن ﮐﯽ ﺣﮑوﻣﺗوں، ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت، ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف، ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ﺑﯾﻧﮏ، وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﺻﻧﻌت، ﺗﮑﻧﯾﮑﯽ اداروں، ﺳول ﺳوﺳﺎﺋﮢﯽ، ﮔﯾﮢس ﻓﺎؤﻧڈﯾﺷن اور دﯾﮕر ﻧﺟﯽ ﺷﻌﺑﮯ ﮐﮯ ﺷراﮐت داروں ﮐو ﯾﮑﺟﺎ ﮐرﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ۔ ﮔﺎوی ﮐﯽ ﻣﻌﺎوﻧت ﮐرﻧﮯ واﻟﯽ ﺣﮑوﻣﺗوں اور دﯾﮕر ﻧﻣﺎﯾﺎں اداروں ﮐﯽ ﻣﮑﻣل ﻓﮩرﺳت ﯾﮩﺎں دﯾﮑﮭﯽ ﺟﺎ ﺳﮑﺗﯽ ﮨﮯ۔

ﺳن 2000 ﻣﯾں ﻗﯾﺎم ﮐﮯ ﺑﻌد ﺳﮯ ﮔﺎوی ﻧﮯ اﯾﮏ ﭘوری ﻧﺳل-ﯾﻌﻧﯽ 1.2 ارب ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﺑﭼوں-ﮐو وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻓراﮨم ﮐرﻧﮯ ﻣﯾں ﻣدد دی ﮨﮯ اور 2 ﮐروڑ 6 ﻻﮐﮭ ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﻣﻣﮑﻧہ اﻣوات ﮐو روﮐﺎ ﮨﮯ، ﺟس ﺳﮯ 78 ﮐم آﻣدﻧﯽ واﻟﮯ ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﻣﯾں ﺑﭼوں ﮐﯽ اﻣوات ﮐﯽ ﺷرح ﻧﺻف ﮨو ﮔﺋﯽ ﮨﮯ۔ ﮔﺎوی ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣﻔظ ﮐو ﺑﮩﺗر ﺑﻧﺎﻧﮯ ﻣﯾں ﺑﮭﯽ اﮨم ﮐردار ادا ﮐرﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ، ﺟس ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣت ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﻧظﺎم ﮐﯽ ﻣﺿﺑوطﯽ ﮐﮯ ﺳﺎﺗﮭ ﺳﺎﺗﮭ اﯾﺑوﻻ، ﮨﯾﺿہ، ﻣﯾﻧﻧﺟﺎﺋﮢس اور زرد ﺑﺧﺎر ﮐﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﮐﮯ ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ذﺧﺎﺋر ﮐﯽ ﻣﺎﻟﯽ ﻣﻌﺎوﻧت ﺷﺎﻣل ﮨﮯ۔ دو دﮨﺎﺋﯾوں ﮐﯽ ﭘﯾش رﻓت ﮐﮯ ﺑﻌد، ﮔﺎوی اب اﮔﻠﯽ ﻧﺳل ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣﻔظ ﭘر ﺗوﺟہ ﻣرﮐوز ﮐﯾﮯ ﮨوﺋﮯ ﮨﮯ، ﺧﺎص طور ﭘر ان ﺑﭼوں ﭘر ﺟﻧﮩﯾں اﺑﮭﯽ ﺗﮏ اﯾﮏ ﺑﮭﯽ وﯾﮑﺳﯾن ﻧﮩﯾں ﻣﻠﯽ۔

ﯾہ اﺗﺣﺎد ﺟدﯾد ﻣﺎﻟﯾﺎﺗﯽ طرﯾﻘوں اور ﺟدﯾد ﮢﯾﮑﻧﺎﻟوﺟﯽ، ﺟﯾﺳﮯ ڈروﻧز ﺳﮯ ﻟﮯ ﮐر ﺑﺎﺋﯾوﻣﯾﮢرﮐس ﺗﮏ، ﮐﺎ اﺳﺗﻌﻣﺎل ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨوﺋﮯ ﺟﺎﻧﯾں ﺑﭼﺎﻧﮯ، ﺑﯾﻣﺎرﯾوں ﮐﮯ ﭘﮭﯾﻼؤ ﮐو روﮐﻧﮯ اور ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ ﮐو ﺧود ﮐﻔﺎﻟت ﮐﯽﺟﺎﻧب

ﻟﮯ ﺟﺎﻧﮯ ﻣﯾں ﻣدد دﯾﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ۔ ﻣزﯾد ﻣﻌﻠوﻣﺎت ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ www.gavi.orgﻣﻼﺣظہ ﮐرﯾں اور ﮨﻣﯾں

ﮐرﯾں۔ ﻓﺎﻟو ﭘرYouTube اورX ،TikTok ،LinkedIn ،Instagram ،Facebook ،Bluesky

ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﮐﮯ ﺑﺎرے ﻣﯾں

ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف، اﻗوام ﻣﺗﺣده ﮐﺎ ﺑﭼوں ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﮐﺎم ﮐرﻧﮯ واﻻ اداره ﮨﮯ، ﺟو دﻧﯾﺎ ﺑﮭر ﻣﯾں ﮨر ﺑﭼﮯ ﮐﮯ ﺣﻘوق ﮐﮯ ﺗﺣﻔظ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﮐﺎم ﮐرﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ، ﺧﺎص طور ﭘر ان ﺑﭼوں ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﺟو ﺳب ﺳﮯ زﯾﺎده ﻣﺣروم ﮨﯾں اور ﻣﺷﮑل ﺗرﯾن ﻋﻼﻗوں ﻣﯾں رﮨﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔ 190 ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ اور ﻋﻼﻗوں ﻣﯾں، ﮨم ﮨر ﻣﻣﮑن ﮐوﺷش ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں ﺗﺎﮐہ ﺑﭼﮯ زﻧده ره ﺳﮑﯾں، ﺗرﻗﯽ ﮐرﯾں اور اﭘﻧﯽ ﻣﮑﻣل ﺻﻼﺣﯾﺗوں ﮐو ﺣﺎﺻل ﮐر ﺳﮑﯾں۔

ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف اور اس ﮐﮯ ﮐﺎم ﮐﮯ ﺑﺎرے ﻣﯾں ﻣزﯾد ﻣﻌﻠوﻣﺎت ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ www.unicef.org :ﻣﻼﺣظہ ﮐرﯾں ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﮐو X )ﮢوﺋﮢر(، ﻓﯾس ﺑﮏ، اﻧﺳﮢﺎﮔرام اور ﯾوﮢﯾوب ﭘر ﻓﺎﻟو ﮐرﯾں

ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت (WHO) ﮐﮯ ﺑﺎرے ﻣﯾں

ﺗﻣﺎم اﻧﺳﺎﻧوں ﮐﯽ ﺻﺣت اور ﻓﻼح وﺑﮩﺑود ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ وﻗف، اور ﺳﺎﺋﻧﺳﯽ ﺑﻧﯾﺎدوں ﭘر رﮨﻧﻣﺎﺋﯽ ﺣﺎﺻل ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨوﺋﮯ، ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت دﻧﯾﺎ ﺑﮭر ﻣﯾں اس ﺑﺎت ﮐو ﯾﻘﯾﻧﯽ ﺑﻧﺎﻧﮯ ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ ﻗﯾﺎدت اور رﮨﻧﻣﺎﺋﯽ ﻓراﮨم ﮐرﺗﺎ ﮨﮯ ﮐہ ﮨر ﺷﺧص ﮐو ﻣﺣﻔوظ اور ﺻﺣت ﻣﻧد زﻧدﮔﯽ ﮐﺎ ﯾﮑﺳﺎں ﻣوﻗﻊ ﻣل ﺳﮑﮯ۔ ﮨم اﻗوام ﻣﺗﺣده ﮐﺎ ﺻﺣت ﮐﺎ اداره ﮨﯾں۔ ﮨم 150ﺳﮯ زاﺋد ﻣﻘﺎﻣﺎت ﭘر ﻣﻣﺎﻟﮏ، ﺷراﮐت داروں اور ﻓرﻧٹ ﻻﺋن ﭘر ﮐﺎم ﮐرﻧﮯ واﻟﮯ اﻓراد ﮐو ﯾﮑﺟﺎ ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں-ﺻﺣت ﮐﯽ ﮨﻧﮕﺎﻣﯽ ﺻورﺗﺣﺎل ﻣﯾں ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ ردﻋﻣل ﮐﯽ ﻗﯾﺎدت ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں، ﺑﯾﻣﺎرﯾوں ﮐﯽ روک ﺗﮭﺎم ﮐرﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں، ﺻﺣت ﮐﮯ ﻣﺳﺎﺋل ﮐﯽ ﺑﻧﯾﺎدی وﺟوﮨﺎت ﮐﺎ ﺣل ﻧﮑﺎﻟﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں اور ادوﯾﺎت و ﺻﺣت ﮐﯽ

ﺳﮩوﻟﯾﺎت ﺗﮏ رﺳﺎﺋﯽ ﮐو ﺑڑھﺎﺗﮯ ﮨﯾں۔ ﮨﻣﺎرا ﻣﺷن ﺻﺣت ﮐو ﻓروغ دﯾﻧﺎ، دﻧﯾﺎ ﮐو ﻣﺣﻔوظ ﺑﻧﺎﻧﺎ اور ﮐﻣزور طﺑﻘﺎت ﮐﯽ ﺧدﻣت ﮐرﻧﺎ ﮨﮯ۔ www.who.int

ﻣزﯾد ﻣﻌﻠوﻣﺎت ﮐﮯ ﻟﯾﮯ راﺑطہ ﮐرﯾں:

| [email protected] ، ﮔﺎوی| اﻟدﯾن،ﺷرافﻣﯾﮓ

Cirũ Kariũki | Gavi | [email protected]

ﺳﺎره اﻟﺣطب |ﯾوﻧﯾﺳف ﻧﯾو ﯾﺎرک [email protected] |

ﺷﻌﺑہ ﻣﯾڈﯾﺎ ، ﻋﺎﻟﻣﯽ اداره ﺻﺣت[email protected] |

UN entities involved in this initiative

UNICEF
United Nations Children's Fund
WHO
World Health Organization

Goals we are supporting through this initiative

United Nations in Pakistan published this content on April 29, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 29, 2026 at 06:28 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]