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In photos: Getting vaccinations to the world’s most hardest to reach places

Ensuring vaccines reach every child, wherever they live, is a huge logistical challenge

Charlotte Hodges
Friday 29 November 2019 08:43 EST
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Children have the power to change the world, yet millions every year don’t reach the age of five because of preventable diseases.

Vaccines are safe, inexpensive and save more than five lives every minute. Yet 1.5 million children still die each year because they haven’t received the right vaccines.

Almost half of the world’s infants who lack vaccinations live in conflict-affected and low-income countries, which are hard to reach.

Ensuring vaccines reach every child is a massive challenge. Every vaccine must be continuously stored at the appropriate temperature from the time they are manufactured until the moment of use. This is called a cold chain.

The journey of a vaccine takes place by air, land and sea, and people around the world overcome enormous challenges to keep the precious vaccines cold and safe.

Vaccination heroes travel by foot, bicycle and donkey to reach the most remote villages to save children from preventable diseases.

Unicef help vaccinate almost half of the world’s children and is providing equipment to keep vaccines cold and effective so they can be sent to some of the world’s hardest-to-reach places.

Visit www.unicef.org.uk/donate/vaccinate/ to help Unicef win the war on disease

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