New Horizons in partnership with eHealth Africa, Donates Innovative Indigo Vaccine Carriers to Boost Immunization in Borno State

Indigo Donation commissioning

15 August 2025Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria

New Horizons Global Health Labs, in collaboration with eHealth Africa, has donated state-of-the-art Indigo Vaccine Carriers to the Borno State Primary Health Care Development Board (BoSPHCDB) to enhance vaccine delivery in remote and hard-to-reach communities.

The commissioning ceremony, held yesterday, 14 August 2025, in Maiduguri, brought together state leaders, donor representatives, technical partners, and frontline health workers to witness the symbolic handover and demonstration of the equipment.

The donation, which comprises 135 Indigo units and multiple charging stations, will be deployed across 61 health facilities in nine Local Government Areas, supporting both routine immunization and special outreach campaigns.

The Indigo Vaccine Carrier, pre-qualified by WHO PQS in July 2024, maintains vaccines at +2°C to +8°C for up to five days without ice or electricity. This freeze-free design protects vaccine potency, reduces wastage, and enables last-mile delivery in mountainous, riverine, and security-compromised areas.

John Beale, New Horizons Global Health Labs representative, highlighted the carrier’s flexibility:

“The Indigo can keep vaccines potent for five days without power, enabling immunization even in unpredictable conditions. Borno’s willingness to pilot the technology since 2017 has been pivotal; their story is now the example we share globally.”

Ota Akhigbe, Director of Partnerships and Programs at eHealth Africa, reflected on the broader significance:

“This commissioning is about more than a donation; it’s about innovation, ownership, and partnerships. With proven results, this technology is helping close the gap so no child is left behind.”

Tahir Buhari, Senior Research Manager at eHealth Africa, shared measurable impact from years of deployment:

“Facilities using Indigo have cut transport costs by 50%, moved from two sessions a week to daily services, and are reaching almost twice as many children compared to ice-pack carriers.”

Receiving the donation, Prof. Mohammed Arab Alhaji, Executive Secretary of the BoSPHCDB, assured that the state will scale the innovation:

“This technology will reach every facility and settlement. The government is committed to procuring more units so zero-dose children become a thing of the past.”

Since 2021, over 496,000 children have been immunized in Borno State using Indigo systems under initiatives such as Reach Every Settlement (RES), Reach Inaccessible Children (RIC), and routine immunization programs.

The event concluded with the symbolic handover, a technical demonstration, and media engagement to showcase how the Indigo system is reshaping cold chain delivery in challenging environments.

For Media Enquiries, Contact:

Amarachi Mbagwu
Communications Manager, eHealth Africa
amarachi.mbagwu@ehealthnigeria.org