WIW 2025

World Immunization Week, 24-30 April 2025

Over the last 50 years, essential vaccines have saved at least 154 million lives. That’s 6 lives a minute, every day, for five decades. 

In these 50 years, vaccination accounts for 40% of the improvement in infant survival, and more children now live to see their first birthday and beyond than at any other time in human history. Measles vaccine alone accounts for 60% of those lives saved.  

There are more lives to be saved by building on these achievements. The future of immunization means not only reaching millions of children who have never received a single shot, but protecting grandparents from influenza, babies from malaria and RSV, pregnant mothers from tetanus, and young girls from HPV.  

We are at a watershed moment in the history of global health. Hard-won gains in stamping out diseases that are preventable through vaccination are in jeopardy. Decades of collaborative efforts between governments, aid agencies, scientists, healthcare workers, and parents got us to where we are today –– a world where we’ve eradicated smallpox and almost eradicated polio. 

Under the banner, ‘Immunization for All is Humanly Possible’, World Immunization Week 2025 aims to ensure even more children, adolescents, adults – and their communities – are protected against vaccine-preventable diseases. Vaccines are proof that less disease, more life is possible when we put our minds to it.  

It’s time to show the world that Immunization for All is Humanly Possible. 

Campaign website & material

 
WIW 2025

• Campaign website

• Resources and assets in six UN languages and editable design files

• Campaign toolkit

Stories of progress

 
WIW 2025

• Going the extra mile to deliver vaccines in Fiji

• LAO PDR makes significant strikes in measles prevention

• Six decades of evidence of the transformative power of vaccines

• Traversing the sea to bring vital immunization to island communities

• Child health improves in Cameroon one year after malaria vaccine introduction

• The Mexican nurse who crossed mountains to bring vaccines and hope

• Layla's journey to vaccinate her son during the big Catch-Up in Somalia

• How one Kyrgyz mother stays on track with her children's health

• Fatima: crossing deserts to protect mothers and newborns in Pakistan

More resources

 
WIW 2025

• WHO's department of Vaccines, immunization and Biologicals

• Health topic: Vaccines and Immunization

• Global and National Immunization Data

• Vaccines Q&As

Donate

 
WIW 2025

Join #OneWorldmovement and support WHO's work to ensure immunization for all!

 
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World Health Organization
Department of Immunization, Vaccines & Biologicals (IVB)
Universal Health Coverage/Lifecourse Division
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland

The Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals department is responsible for targeting vaccine-preventable diseases, guiding immunization research and establishing immunization policy.

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