-
US Vice President Vance departs for Hungary in support of Orban
-
Ex-top aide of Spanish PM set to go on trial for graft
-
Tokyo confirms Japanese national held by Iran freed
-
AI-generated artists break through in country music
-
Rio de Janeiro's gangs hijack buses to sow chaos in war with police
-
Iran defiant as deadline looms for Trump threat to infrastructure
-
Tiger's treatment battle in thoughts of stars at Masters
-
Thai amateur 'Fifa' ready for Masters kick-off
-
'Hacks' has 'perfect' ending after 5 seasons, says star Smart
-
Age and near misses don't worry Rose in Masters quest
-
'Incredibly dangerous': rescuing downed fighter crew in Iran
-
Wall Street stocks rise on hopes for US-Iran ceasefire
-
High-flying Villarreal stumble at Girona
-
Promoter defends plan for Kanye West to headline London fest
-
Napoli's Serie A title defence boosted by beating AC Milan
-
Trump lashes out at 'paper tiger' NATO while re-upping Greenland claim
-
Reed finds DP World Tour success after leaving LIV
-
Lunar crater named after Artemis commander's deceased wife
-
WNBA star Reese joining Atlanta from Chicago: club
-
Gotterup seeks rare win in Masters debut
-
Bayern's Kompany waiting on Kane for 'toughest' game at Real Madrid
-
Juve beat Genoa to close in on Serie A top four
-
'Historic day': Artemis astronauts break space distance record
-
Augusta already firm and fast ahead of 90th Masters
-
French hope Seixas storms Basque Tour time-trial opener
-
Trump says Iran ceasefire proposal 'very significant step'
-
Wawrinka falls in first round on Monte Carlo farewell
-
Greece PM calls on European prosecutor to act 'without delay' on agriculture fraud
-
US Democratic lawmakers slam 'economic bombing' after Cuba visit
-
Red Cross chief condemns 'deliberate threats' against civilians in Mideast war
-
Giant step for humankind: Artemis crew to set space distance record
-
Wawrinka falls in first round of Monte Carlo Masters
-
Ex-England rugby international Lawes to leave Brive
-
Fit-again Mbappe at Real Madrid for clashes like Bayern tie: Arbeloa
-
Swimmers McKeown, O'Callaghan and Chalmers dominate at Australian Open
-
Bucha: When the Russian killers came...
-
Iran, a Terrorist State with No Right to Exist
-
African players in Europe: Semenyo scores as City rout Liverpool
-
Israeli strikes kill Iran Guards intel chief as Trump deadline looms
-
Saving energy in everyday life or a complete rip-off?
-
US sprint star Richardson wins Australia's Stawell Gift in record time
-
Rockets down Warriors in Curry return, Flagg carries Mavs past Lakers
-
Artemis mission approaches lunar loop for first flyby since 1972
-
Israeli rescuers search for missing in building strike, two dead
-
Defiant Iran ramps up attacks after Trump warning
-
Saudi oasis town adjusts to life in the firing line
-
Pogacar stays humble with Monument history beckoning
-
Real Madrid hoping Champions League magic halts Bayern juggernaut
-
Sputtering Arsenal face test of character in Sporting clash
-
'Not the Cairo we know': Energy shock from Iran war dims Egypt nights
In vaccination champ Brazil, many have stopped getting shots
Two years after Brazil began emerging from its pandemic horror show thanks to a massive immunization campaign, officials face a paradoxical predicament: vaccination rates have plunged, and not just for Covid-19.
The troubling trend has left millions exposed to once-eradicated diseases.
Doctors, public officials and UNICEF have sounded the alarm over collapsing immunization rates in Brazil, where overall vaccination coverage has fallen from an impressive 95 percent in 2015 to just 68 percent last year, according to official figures.
For polio, the figure fell from 85 percent to 68 percent, triggering warnings that the disease could make a comeback in Brazil, where it was eradicated in 1989.
The figures are similar for other vaccines, allowing diseases to spread. Measles, officially eliminated in Brazil in 2016, returned two years later. There are fears diphtheria is making a resurgence, too.
Health experts say vaccine hesitancy is a growing problem worldwide. But it is particularly worrying in Brazil, a sprawling country of 203 million people that until recently was hailed as a champion of mass vaccination drives.
Then an anti-vax movement started spreading around 2016, soon gaining outsize influence via a powerful ally: far-right leader Jair Bolsonaro, president from 2019 to 2022, who refused to be vaccinated against Covid-19, joking the jab could "turn you into an alligator."
"It's very sad to see how a country whose vaccination programs set an example for the world can suddenly suffer from an anti-vaccine movement," Natalia Pasternak, head of the Question of Science Institute (IQC), a public policy think tank, told AFP.
"It's very sad to see how 50 years of work can be so easily destroyed in three."
- Success story undone -
Covid-19 highlighted the shots-in-arms capacities of Brazil's struggling but lauded universal public health system.
Back in 2020, some of the most haunting images of the pandemic were of mass graves and corpses piled in refrigerator trucks in places such as Manaus, in northern Brazil, whose overwhelmed hospitals ran out of oxygen.
Then new images started emerging in 2021, of public health workers turning Rio de Janeiro's carnival parade venue into a drive-through immunization center, or boating deep into the Amazon rainforest to administer vaccines in Indigenous villages.
Experts credit the campaign's success with stopping a far bigger tragedy in Brazil, where more than 700,000 people have died of Covid-19, second only to the United States.
Despite a slow start -- widely blamed on Bolsonaro -- Brazil had by early last year vaccinated 93 percent of adults against Covid-19.
Then rates fell, not only for Covid-19 vaccines but across the board.
- The 'infodemic' -
Many factors are driving the decline, experts say.
They include failure to catch up on vaccines delayed during the pandemic, inaccessible health care and declining awareness of the dangers of once-ubiquitous diseases.
But experts say a new element is making things much worse: the toxic mix of politics, polarization and disinformation that exploded during the pandemic and is increasingly familiar worldwide.
In Brazil, despite Bolsonaro losing a divisive 2022 election to veteran leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the anti-vax movement still thrives.
"We're facing a post-trust scenario, in which families are being attacked by disinformation and lies. It's not just the occasional fake news story, it's very structured," said Isabella Ballalai of the Brazilian Immunization Society.
"The consequences of that 'infodemic' will be worse than the pandemic itself."
Brazilian Health Minister Nisia Trindade says the government is evaluating how to punish doctors spreading anti-vax disinformation.
"Criminal fake news is sowing doubt and fueling vaccine hesitancy," she told AFP.
- Going local -
A recent survey by the Brazilian Pediatrics Society (SBP) and IQC found that doctors said parents' most common reasons for not vaccinating their children were fears of side effects and mistrust of vaccines.
Experts say health workers are desperate for reliable information to counter the flood of anti-vax disinformation.
Pasternak, whose organization is working on creating just that, says health officials also need to think locally.
"Studies show the best way to convince people to get vaccinated is working with local leaders... People listen to those they trust: pastors, community leaders," she said.
But reversing the trend will not be easy, Pasternak admitted.
"We have lots of work to do."
A.Williams--AT