Botched anti-measles campaign kills 15 kids in South Sudan

The country's health minister says the people who vaccinated the children had used unsterilised syringes and were neither qualified nor trained for the immunisation campaign.

South Sudanese children wait to be registered among the displaced at a Red Cross compound in Wau, where violence broke out in breach of a peace deal.
TRT World and Agencies

South Sudanese children wait to be registered among the displaced at a Red Cross compound in Wau, where violence broke out in breach of a peace deal.

At least 15 children died in South Sudan in early May after health workers vaccinating them against measles used the same syringe without sterilising it, the country's health minister said on Friday.

About 300 children were vaccinated from May 2-5 in Nacholdokopele village in Eastern Equatoria state.

At least 32 have recovered after falling ill with symptoms including fever, vomiting and diarrhoea, Health Minister Riek Gai Kok said.

"The team that vaccinated the children in this tragic event were neither qualified nor trained for the immunisation campaign," Kok told a news conference.

A report prepared by a committee of specialists found the children had died from severe sepsis toxicity as a result of the vaccine's contamination, caused by repeated use of an unsterilized syringe.

Oil-producing South Sudan, which became independent in 2011, has struggled to provide basic services such as healthcare since it descended into civil war in December 2013.

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