ACCORDING to the Ministry of Health, Myanmar is currently administering vaccines for 13 diseases, matching international standards, and has no major outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases.
The Union
Minister for Health shared these updates during the World Immunization Week
2026 ceremony held on 24 April at Office No 4, Nay Pyi Taw. He noted that this
year’s theme is “For Every Generation, Vaccines Work,” and immunization
activities in Myanmar began as early as 1889.
The Union
Minister reviewed the progress of national vaccination coverage: 2021– Due to
the COVID-19 pandemic, coverage fell below 50 per cent; 2025– Coverage
rebounded to over 80 per cent.
Immunization
remains a priority under the President’s “100-Day Plan”. The Union Minister
highlighted the rapid response within seven days following the major Mandalay
earthquake on 28 March 2025–administering tetanus vaccines and diarrhoea
vaccines.
The Union
Minister attributed the lack of disease outbreaks to the strong collaboration
between health workers, volunteers, related departments, and parents. To
sustain these efforts, the State spends approximately US$10 million annually
through two main funding methods: self-financing entirely by the State budget
and co-financing between the State and GAVI (The Vaccine Alliance).
MT/ZN
#TheGlobalNewLightOfMyanmar
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