More than 1,3-million future deaths were averted in 2023 thanks to vaccination programmes supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
This achievement, which translates to more than two lives saved every minute of the day, is highlighted alongside historic progress in the battle to prevent cervical cancer through HPV vaccinations and a record level of co-financing from the countries Gavi supports in Gavi’s 2023 Annual Progress Report.
With 69-million children immunised in 2023 – the second highest number of children ever immunised in one year – the report details that the number of children that have now been protected with routine childhood vaccines since Gavi was founded in 2000 has now exceeded 1,1-billion. The economic benefits of these vaccinations to Gavi-supported countries since 2021 stands at $52-billion, the report says.
Other highlights of 2023 for the Alliance include major progress against cervical cancer with 14-million girls vaccinated against HPV with Gavi support. This number is greater than the previous 10 years combined. Gavi has now helped prevent over 600 000 future deaths from cervical cancer alone and is on track to reach 86-million girls by the end of 2025.
In a sign that Gavi-supported countries increasingly recognise the importance of immunisation programmes, the amount of domestic resources mobilised in 2023 – $215-million – was the largest ever. This level of financial ownership – a key component of Gavi’s approach to sustainability and country ownership – was reaffirmed as 55 vaccination programmes that were initially launched with Gavi funding are now fully financed by national governments as of 2023.
“By vaccinating children and the vulnerable we not only enable millions of people to lead healthier, more fulfilled lives, we contribute to families’ prosperity, to strong and more stable communities, and to economic development that is already translating into countries’ paying more towards their immunisation programmes than ever before,” says José Manuel Barroso, chair of the Gavi Board.
“Gavi countries are on the front line of climate change with many vulnerable to economic instability and geopolitical tension: for them to be able to immunise more children, not to mention expand important programmes such as HPV, deserves recognition,” says Dr Sania Nishtar, CEO of Gavi. “Fully funding Gavi for its next five-year period will be crucial in expanding these hard-won gains and helping countries further along the pathway to fully sustaining their own immunisation programmes.”
More than halfway through its current strategic period, Gavi is on track to meet the majority of its mission indicators.
This includes reaching 300-million children between 2021 and 2025; reducing under-five mortality by 10%; helping to prevent 7-million to 8-million future deaths; reducing the overall health burden on countries that vaccine-preventable diseases impose; and delivering economic benefits of $80-billion to $100-billion.
However, the Vaccine Alliance remains behind its 2025 target of reducing the number of “zero-dose” children – those who have never received a single vaccine – by 25%. While many countries are reaching more children than ever the Covid-19 pandemic and an increasing birth cohort combined with the challenges of climate and fragility are making it harder to reach the most vulnerable – and in 2023 the number of zero-dose children rose to 11-million.
Achieving the Alliance’s ambitious goal will require global health partners, working with governments and communities, to collaborate and innovate.
As Gavi looks towards its next strategic period from 2026 to 2030, meeting its funding target of $9-billion will be essential to expand protection against more diseases, ensure the most vulnerable populations are not left behind, and protect the world against future disease outbreaks and pandemics.
“Vaccines are among the most powerful inventions in history,” says Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general. “With continued and increased in investment in Gavi we can harness their power, saving millions of lives in the coming decades.”