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Get-a-jab-resource-pack

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©Unicef/Keïta
GET A JAB
GIVE A JAB
GET YOUR FLU JAB. SAVE A CHILD’S LIFE.
T E A M U NI C E F F UN D RAISIN G PAC K
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
GET A JAB, SAVE A LIFE
Get a Jab, Give a Jab was created by supporters
like you and your hard work has made it a huge
success, saving the lives of thousands of children.
As the Get a Jab, Give a Jab campaign grows, we have
made this pack to help you with your campaign.
We hope you find it useful.
Unicef provides life-saving vaccinations for vulnerable
children around the world. Thanks to your support
through Get a Jab, Give a Jab we can vaccinate more
children and make the world a safer place for every child.
I have been so impressed with how enthusiastic and
passionate all those involved in the campaign are.
Your support makes a real difference.
Together, we can make a lasting difference for
vulnerable children.
Thank you,
Head of Supporter Services, Unicef UK
HOME
© Unicef/Párrag
Paul Relf
UNICEF’S WORK
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
WH Y GE T IN VO LVED
Cambridgeshire Community Service Trust tell us
how they raised enough money to help vaccinate
thousands of children.
“We kept hearing about Get a Jab, Give a Jab at National
Flu meetings and on the Infection Prevention Society
forums. We were keen to try it, so we approached our
Director of Finance. They agreed to donate money for
every flu vaccine that our staff received.
“Once staff knew that getting a flu jab would also help
children get life-saving vaccinations, more of them were
keen to have the jab. Some staff – who hadn’t received
their flu vaccination before – not only ended up changing
their mind, but actually became advocates for the flu jab.
We raised £750, which could help vaccinate thousands of
children. I would really recommend getting involved in Get
a Jab, Give a Jab if you haven’t already. It’s such a simple,
worthwhile thing to do.
Head of Infection Prevention and Control
Cambridgeshire Community Services Trust
GET A JAB, GIVE A JAB, AND YOU
©Unicef/Ohanesian
Chris Sharp,
REACHING HALF THE WORLD’S CHILDREN
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
REACHING HALF THE WORLD’S CHILDREN
Unicef reach half the world’s
children with life-saving vaccines.
It costs just:
In 2018, we procured 2.36 billion
doses of vaccines on behalf of
99 low and middle-income countries.
A little over 50p
to protect a child
against measles
© Unicef/Dubourthoumieu
Sadly, there is still so much to be
done. Every day 7,000 children under
5 die, most from preventable causes.
© Unicef/Zaidi
We tailor vaccination services to the
specific needs of communities and
remove the obstacles that prevent
children from receiving life-saving
vaccines.
© Unicef/Pudlowski
Since 1980, we have helped to
quadruple vaccination rates for
children worldwide, saving up to 3
million children’s lives every year.
8p to protect
a child against
Tetanus
14p to protect
a child against polio
It doesn’t need to be this way.
WHY GET INVOLVED
WHAT YOU COULD ACHIEVE
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
WH AT YO U C O U L D A CHI EVE
All the money donated through Get a Jab, Give
a Jab will help immunize children in some of the
most difficult to reach and at-risk communities in
the world.
£100 could protect 200 children
against measles for life.
£450 could help provide polio
vaccines for more than 3,200
children.
£700 could help provide 8,750
children with vaccines to protect
them from tetanus.
£1500 could provide 4,370
REACHING HALF THE WORLD’S CHILDREN
© Unicef/Herwig
doses of life-saving vaccines to
protect children from measles,
tetanus and polio, PLUS 46 large
vaccine carriers to keep the
vaccines cold and effective.
WHATEVER IT TAKES
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
WH ATE V E R I T TA K ES
Procure vaccines
Unicef’s Supply Division headquarters in Copenhagen,
Denmark is the largest humanitarian warehouse in the
world, serving children across the world.
Keep vaccines cool
Unicef invests in cold and supply chain infrastructure and
helps establish the use of solar power, mobile technology
and biometrics to keep vaccines – and children – safe.
© Unicef/Issa
UNICEF works with partners in government, other
UN agencies and the private sector to provide
vaccinations for the children who need it the most.
Build capacity and knowledge
In Afghanistan, Unicef has started working with girls who
have just left school, training them to become community
health workers.
Deliver vaccines
Vaccination heroes travel with specialist equipment
across all terrain – by foot, bicycle or donkey – to reach
the most remote villages and save children’s lives.
Act fast in emergencies
Our experience means we can respond quickly to the
threat of disease following an emergency – swiftly
transporting essential vaccines from our supply hubs and
distributing to the affected communities.
Provide reliable information
In the Philippines we have devised a highly successful
communications campaign for social media, using
high-profile influencers to target mothers with
pro-vaccine messages.
Innovate
Unicef is launching its first ever ‘drone and data academy’
in Malawi, aiming to certify 150 students to build and pilot
drones. We hope to use drones to deliver vaccines, blood
supplies, and medicines to very remote areas.
WHAT YOU COULD ACHIEVE
MALI’S VACCINATION HEROES
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
MALI’S VACCINATION HEROES
In Mali’s increasingly volatile central region
of Mopti, fewer than 4 in 10 children are fully
vaccinated.
Fear, conflict and a partial ban on travelling by
motorcycle make it difficult to reach health centres,
which can be over 10 miles away. To make matters
worse, there is only one qualified doctor per every
18,000 people – far below WHO’s recommended
standards.
Faced with these logistical challenges, Unicef uses
donkey and horse carts to bring vaccines directly to
isolated children. Vaccine hero Mamadou travels by
donkey cart for up to 8 hours in the hot sun, with
vaccines stored in portable cool boxes to keep them
at the correct temperature.
WHATEVER IT TAKES
Mamadou travels by donkey cart to deliver his life-saving vaccines
RESOURCE FOR PRESS AND COMMS
© Unicef/Keïta
The money raised by your Get a Jab, Give a Jab
scheme will not only help buy life-saving vaccines
– it will help ensure our vaccine heroes can deliver
vaccines safely and securely, by whatever means
necessary.
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
RESOURCE FOR PRESS AND COMMS
Please feel free to share these statistics in your press releases
and internal comms. If you would like to change anything,
please contact [email protected]
Power of vaccines:
In 2017, the global number of children vaccinated was 116.2 million – the
highest ever reported.
Vaccines protect children against disease and death, saving up to three million
lives every year – that’s more than five lives saved every minute of every day.
Globally, 1.5 million deaths could be avoided every year if children were
vaccinated.
Scale of the problem:
Almost 20 million children will not receive their most basic vaccines this year.
About 40% (almost 8 million) of infants missing out on life-saving vaccines
live in areas affected by conflict or disaster.
Since January 2019 there have been more than 360,000 measles cases
reported in over 180 countries – the highest rate in 13 years.
Unicef and vaccines:
MALI’S VACCINATION HEROES
© Unicef/Keïta
Unicef reaches half the world’s children with life-saving vaccines.
Unicef is the leading agency for vaccine procurement. In 2018, Unicef
procured 2.36 billion doses of vaccines on behalf of 99 low and middleincome countries.
Between 2000 and 2017, Unicef helped vaccinate more than 2 billion children.
HOW TO PAY YOUR DONATIONS IN
WELCOME
WHY GET
INVOLVED
WHAT
WE DO
WHAT YOU
COULD ACHIEVE
HOW WE
DO IT
VACCINES
IN MALI
RESOURCES
HOW TO
PAY IN
THANK
YOU
HOW TO PAY YOUR DONATIONS IN
When you are paying in your donation, please take the
following steps so that we know it is a Get a Jab, Give a Jab
donation and so we can send you a certificate to say thank you.
1) Download a Send your money to Unicef form.
2) Fill it in.
3) Email the form to [email protected]
Bank transfer
If you’d like to send us your funds via a bank transfer (BACs), please
use the bank details below. Your bank will give you a receipt as proof
of payment.
The UK Committee for Unicef – Donations Account,
HSBC Plc., PO Box 4BQ, 133 Regent Street, London W1B 4HX
Account Number: 91566814
Sort Code: 40-06-02
RESOURCE FOR PRESS AND COMMS
© Unicef/Dejongh
Sending in cash and cheques
You can pay any donations collected in cash into your bank account
and make a card or BACs payment to cover this. Complete the Send
your money to Unicef form to include cash and cheque payments.
THANK YOU
Mariam, aged 3 months, has just received her vaccines in the remote
village of Kankelena, Mali.
THANK YOU
Thank you for supporting
our work and helping to keep
children safe from disease
around the world.
©Unicef/Keïta
Unicef UK is funded entirely by voluntary
contributions. We receive no funding from the
UN budget.
© Unicef UK. Registered charity England &
Wales (1072612) Scotland (SC043677).
HOW TO PAY YOUR DONATIONS IN
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