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UNICEF Sends 'Love Letter' to Those Who Help Immunise Children against Disease

Photo: Collected

Photo: Collected

The United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund or UNICEF has lauded the immunization drives across the world that work to save children’s lives and protect the next generation from sickness and death by dedicating a ‘love letter’ to everyone contributing to the process.

The letter goes as follows:   

This is a love letter to someone I’ve never met.

His name was James Phipps, and in 1796 when he was just 8 years old, Edward Jenner gave him the first modern vaccine.

This vaccine defended him against smallpox. It was inspired by centuries of innovation by the physicians of North Africa, the grandmothers of Constantinople, and the doctors of Ming Dynasty China, all seeking ways to protect the next generation from sickness and death.

That’s a quest I know well. I work at UNICEF, and for 75 years we’ve been the world’s largest procurer of vaccines, responsible for immunizing 45 percent of children on Earth. But once upon a time, I was a child too, and there’s a good chance that I, like many of the kids we work with, wouldn’t be here without vaccines. So, this is a love letter from me, and from all of us here at UNICEF, on behalf of every child who is alive today because of vaccines.

Because we want to say... thank you.

Thank you, to virologist Jonas Salk for the vaccine against polio. Thank you, Kati Karikó whose life’s work on mRNA helped us fight COVID-19. Thank you, to Nobel Prize winner Max Theiler whose team fed mosquitoes their own blood to create the vaccine against yellow fever.

Thank you to the workers who fill vials at factories. Thank you to the designers who make the solar fridges that keep them cool. Thank you to the boat crews, pilots, and drivers who bravely flooded rivers in monsoon season, or trek for miles in the snow, to bring babies their very first dose.

Thank you to the camels of Pakistan who carried the vaccines in last year’s two-week sprint to vaccinate more than 90 million children against measles and rubella. Thank you to the doctors and nurses who give needles with a funny voice so it doesn’t hurt too much. And thank you to Elvis Presley, who in 1956 had his vaccine moments before going on stage to spread the word about polio, because that’s what kings do.

This is a love letter to all of you because love is what it takes – To ‘days of tranquillity’, when UNICEF arranges ceasefires to vaccinate children in conflict zones; to Jim Grant, the Executive Director of UNICEF who in the 1980s helped raise the global childhood vaccination rate from 20 percent to 80 percent; and to the World Health Organization, who in 1966 launched the Essential Programme on Immunization and in just 11 years, wiped smallpox from the face of the Earth.

Every year, vaccines save the lives of up to 3 million children. But there are still some kids who miss out. As we invest to recover from the pandemic, we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build health systems that reach every child. So this is a love letter to our leaders in government – the ones who take health care seriously – because the only way we’ve got this far, and the only way we’ll get further, is by investing in healthcare for all.

Now there’s just one person left to thank: you. This is a love letter to you, because if you’ve ever been vaccinated, or have had your children vaccinated, then you are part of the chain of linked arms that keeps every one of us safe. You are the living proof of what humanity can do through dedication, cooperation, and love. So from all of us here at UNICEF, and from every child who is alive because of vaccines, thank you.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Let’s secure a #LongLifeForAll

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