Newborns to receive Hepatitis B vaccinations from October – Dr Amponsah-Achiano

Story By: Ghanaian Times

From October this year, all newborns will be vacci­nated against Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) at birth, the Programme Manager of the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI), Dr Kwame Ampon­sah-Achiano, has stated.

According to him, the purpose of the administration of the vaccine was to help curb mother-to-child HBV transmission and would be administered within 24 hours.

Dr Amponsah-Achiano said this at a Na­tional Hepatitis B birth dose stakeholders forum held in Accra yesterday to provide stakeholders the opportunity to make valuable input into the implementation of the Hepatitis B birth dose programme by the government.

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The forum was co-hosted by the Ghana Health Service (GHS) and the Hepatitis Foundation of Ghana.

He explained that the Hepatitis B birth dose programme was part of the commit­ment of the Ghana Health Service (GHS) to combat Hepatitis B, improve public health, and achieve broader health goals by 2030.

Furthermore, Dr Amponsah-Achiano said that the government was adequately prepared to roll out the administration of the HBV vaccines for babies at birth within 24 hours.

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According to him, the Ministry of Health recently developed a plan towards ensuring Ghana self-finances her immuni­sation programmes as the country transi­tioned from Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI) vaccine support by 2030.

Dr Amponsah-Achiano said that the government had updated the country’s im­munisation policy and the EPI Field Guide to reflect Hepatitis B birth dose vaccines.

In addition, he said that the government had updated data recording and reporting tools at the Ministry of Health to reflect the Hepatitis B birth dose vaccination, while the application submitted to GAVI for the introduction of “Hepatitis B birth dose into routine immigration pro­grammes” had been approved.

“Hepatitis B vaccine is not new, but what we are introducing now is the one that we will give to a child who is newly born so that we can prevent the mother-to-child transmission.

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It’s been on the drawing board for many years, but fortunately we have the green­light to bring it on board to complete the recommendation of three doses minimum by the World Health Organisation, includ­ing the birth dose,” Dr Amponsah-Achiano said.

For his part, the Director General of the Ghana Health Service (GHS), Professor Samuel Kaba Akoriyea, in a speech read on his behalf by the Managing Director of the Ghana Infectious Disease Centre, Dr Joseph Adjetey Oliver-Commey, highlight­ed the importance of immunisation in ensuring that the country minimised the mother-to-child HBV transmission.

Professor Akoriyea also stressed the need for the country to leverage collective expertise, resources, and prioritise capac­ity-building to enable her to achieve the objectives of the immunisation of babies against HBV and prevent mother-to-child transmission of the virus.

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