Anjali Nair, Student Leader, Engages Her Campus on Vaccination

Anjali Nair, Student Leader, Engages Her Campus on Vaccination

A Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF participant as a child, when Anjali came to the University of Georgia and saw there wasn't a UNICEF Campus Club, she decided to help found one — and to help engage her community in urgent child health issues.

Anjali Nair is a second-year student at the University of Georgia (UGA), majoring in health promotion and minoring in Arabic. She is also one of the founders and co-presidents of UGA's UNICEF Campus Club, part of a growing grassroots movement rooted in a belief that college students have a vital role to play in helping the world's children survive. For World Immunization Week 2018, UNICEF USA sat down with Anjali to learn more about her sense of global citizenship, and what motivated her to become a campus advocate on child health issues and vaccination.

Anjali and friends advocate at UNICEF USA's Annual Summit 2018 in Washington, D.C.

Anjali and other members of the University of Georgia UNICEF Campus Club volunteer at UNICEF Kid Power Day in Atlanta.

Q. What are you studying at UGA and what classes are you taking?

"At one point, I thought I wanted to go to medical school and study genetics. But, two years ago, I spent time in Morocco on a U.S. State Department exchange program and it made me start to think of health care from a more global point of view to see that, besides science, there are socioeconomic and cultural and political influences that all play a role when it comes to health.

I'm learning about how we can guide people to make the best decisions for themselves.

Right now, I'm taking a class on the foundations of health promotion and behavior, and I'm learning about how we can guide people to make the best decisions for themselves on their own. So many major health issues are preventable, whether by immunization or by promoting healthy behaviors early in life before a disease is contracted."

Q. Why did you help found a UNICEF Campus Club at UGA?

"I grew up Trick-or-Treating for UNICEF. When I got to UGA and saw there wasn’t a UNICEF campus club, I decided to start one. The issues that UNICEF targets are ones that connect to everybody on campus, whether you're a public health major or an engineering major or studying computer science or communications or journalism… UNICEF has something for everybody."

Q. How did you become involved in advocating for vaccines and immunization?

"From a young age, we’re told that vaccines are important and necessary, but because we have such ready access to vaccines in the U.S., I don't think that we fully recognize the adverse effects of not having those resources. It's really easy to only think about what's going on in your own community. But it’s important to remember that we're all global citizens."

It’s important to remember that we're all global citizens.

Q. What is your UGA UNICEF Campus Club planning to do for World Immunization Week this April?

"With World Immunization Week 2018 starting on April 23, we, as a club, wanted to do something to engage other students on issues related to vaccines. We realized that many don’t know the details of what goes into making and distributing vaccines. They don’t know how hard it can be to reach children with vaccines in some countries, or the myths that sometimes get attached to them. We reached out to some professors and, on March 21, we held a speaking panel about immunization, with plenty of opportunities for the audience to ask questions. We covered topics like vaccine basics, development, myths, barriers to access and what is being done on the ground across the globe to combat these issues."

Anjali and University of Georgia Campus Club convene an expert panel on vaccines.

Anjali and fellow UNICEF at UGA Campus Club members convened a panel featuring professors and a UNICEF USA representative to discuss vaccines. 

Q. What are some of the barriers to mobilizing college students and others to support vaccination?

"One of the biggest myths surrounding vaccines is that they cause autism. I've met people who are very wary about vaccinating their kids because of that, even though it's been debunked many times. But it can be hard to unscare a person once there’s false information out there, and he or she feels convinced. It’s important not to be negative or rude about what people may think, and work to change their feelings in a positive way. So, I might say, 'Oh yeah, I heard about that study and I saw that it went viral and was all over the Internet. But the reality is that the study was completely debunked, and the person in charge of it lost his doctor’s license.'

It can be hard to unscare a person once there’s false information out there.

"That idea of sharing facts rather than judging goes back to the cognitive-based philosophy of public health that I’ve been learning about in class: presenting people with the facts that allow them to make the best decisions for themselves."

Q. How has your experience with UNICEF Campus Clubs and vaccine advocacy influenced you?

"Being involved with UNICEF has made me even more interested in targeting health problems at their root cause rather than doing diagnoses and damage control. I’m becoming particularly interested in emerging infectious diseases like Zika. One day, I’d like to work on research and educational programs around behavior that can help prevent infectious diseases like Zika. Hopefully, by then, there will even be a Zika vaccine."

Iraqi girl gets vaccinated.

UNICEF and partners support vaccinations of all children under 15 living in camps for families forced from home by the civil war in Iraq, like this one for a girl in the Haj Ali Camp in the northern part of the country.  ©UNICEF/UN065656/Rafatt/2017

As part of World Immunization Week 2018, UNICEF and partners are calling on everyone — from governments and advocates to donors and members of the general public — to do what they can to help increase immunization coverage in their communities.

Because #VaccinesWork.

Because every dollar spent on all forms of childhood immunizations yields an estimated $44 in economic and social benefits.

And because immunization provides a foundation for good health at the start of life, and puts children on a path toward a healthier, more productive future.

Show your support: Add your name to our petition urging the U.S. Congress to maintain funding for programs needed to further reduce child mortality — including more access to lifesaving vaccines — via the bipartisan Reach Every Mother and Child Act

 

TAKE A STAND

 

TOP PHOTO: Anjali Nair, UNICEF USA Campus Club Leader and student at the University of Georgia.

HOW TO HELP

There are many ways to make a difference

War, famine, poverty, natural disasters — threats to the world's children keep coming. But UNICEF won't stop working to keep children healthy and safe.

UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories — more places than any other children's organization. UNICEF has the world's largest humanitarian warehouse and, when disaster strikes, can get supplies almost anywhere within 72 hours. Constantly innovating, always advocating for a better world for children, UNICEF works to ensure that every child can grow up healthy, educated, protected and respected.

Would you like to help give all children the opportunity to reach their full potential? There are many ways to get involved.

Donate to UNICEF USA to help kids survive and thrive
Invest in children and their futures
A group of smiling UNICEF club members, wearing UNICEF USA t-shirts, stand on a city street and reach their arms out to signify welcoming others.
Rally friends and family to help kids
UNICEF delivers supplies wherever kids need them most
Help UNICEF get lifesaving aid to children in crisis