Bucharest, Romania
(October 22, 1998) --
In a world where far
too many children still suffer and die from measles infection,
Becton Dickinson has stepped up to help.
Romanian children are malnourished and highly susceptible to the
effects of measles. A major measles epidemic occurs about every
three years there, with the last outbreak resulting in over
30,000 cases and 16 deaths. There is every reason to believe
that there will be another epidemic in 2001, unless broad
immunization of children begins now.
To beat this cycle of suffering and death, a mass vaccination
campaign will reach over 3 million Romanian children over the
next three months. Becton Dickinson has donated a large quantity
of safety disposal containers, enough to accommodate all
syringes used in the school-based, countrywide campaign, thereby
helping to ensure that they are disposed of safely.
The International Federation of Red Cross Societies (IFRC)
organized the program in conjunction with The Romanian Ministry
of Health. The IFRC has mobilized international support for the
effort, including the involvement of the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. The 1998 program aims to stop the spread
of measles in Romanian children so that by that by 2000 there
will be no deaths from locally acquired acute measles, and the
disease can be eliminated by 2007.