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    Home»Trending News»Vaccines facing misinformation spike: WHO experts
    Trending News

    Vaccines facing misinformation spike: WHO experts

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMarch 18, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    GENEVA: Vaccine programmes are being challenged by rising misinformation and an uncertain pipeline for research funding, the World Health Organization’s immunisation experts said on Wednesday (Mar 18).

    And the war in the Middle East will likely hamper the fight against polio, the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunisation (SAGE) said.

    The group held its biannual meeting last week, focusing on COVID-19 jab recommendations, typhoid vaccine dosing schedules and oral polio vaccine doses in routine immunisation.

    “Emerging challenges for the future include uncertain funding for vaccine research and development, and misinformation and distorted information that erodes public trust in vaccines,” said SAGE.

    “Protecting trust and countering misinformation will be a central focus in 2026.”

    WHO vaccines chief Kate O’Brien said resources would be targeted this year on protecting the roll-out of core immunisation programmes.

    “We’re in a really deeply changing world for infectious diseases and for vaccine programmes,” she said, due to conflicts, economic challenges and health budgets being cut.

    Trust in vaccines is being “threatened by misinformation”, she told a press conference.

    Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health chief, has long voiced anti-vaccine rhetoric and inaccurate claims connecting vaccines and autism.

    A WHO review of all available evidence issued in December reaffirmed there is no link between vaccines and autism – contrary to the theories being propagated in the United States and beyond.

    “Vaccines do not cause autism and they never have caused autism,” stressed O’Brien.

    She said vaccines had saved 154 million lives over the past 50 years, and more than 30 diseases could be prevented through immunisation.

    “The risk is about backsliding, or even countries deciding that they can’t afford all of the vaccines that are in their programme,” she said.

    CRISIS AND RESPONSE CYCLE

    The group voiced concern over the ongoing transmission of wild poliovirus in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the persistent detection of vaccine-derived type-2 poliovirus in several African countries, a strain related to the weakened live poliovirus contained in oral polio vaccines.

    “The conflict in the Middle East may well lead to further dissemination of polioviruses, which would then add to the burden to be mopped up in order to reach that eradication goal,” SAGE chair Anthony Scott told reporters.

    O’Brien added: “There are billions and billions of dollars being spent, day in and day out to destroy lives through wars.

    “Does the world have its priorities straight about what we’re investing in?”

    As for COVID jabs, SAGE said countries should consider routine vaccination twice a year for groups at the highest risk of severe disease, because of the dwindling protection levels beyond six months.

    O’Brien said the COVID-19 vaccine market had contracted down to a limited number of manufacturers and types, with mRNA vaccines remaining the dominant form.

    She called for more investment, with one priority being to develop pan-coronavirus vaccines that tackle more than just COVID-19, and longer-lasting injections to reduce the repeat jabs burden on health services and the elderly.

    But research and development funding tends to follow major outbreaks, meaning “we are always in this cycle of crisis and response”, she said.

    SAGE executive secretary Annelies Wilder-Smith said “we really need” COVID-19 vaccines that have bigger impact on mild disease and reducing transmission of the virus.



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