The Commissioner for Health, Dr Aminu Tsanyawa, made this known at a news conference in Kano on Monday ahead of the exercise.
He said that the exercise would be conducted on a house-to-house basis to ensure coverage.
Tsanyawa stressed that the four-day exercise would be conducted alongside the annual Maternal Newborn and Child Health Week.
The aim, he said, was to prevent complicated and severe malaria incidences among the age group.
He also said that the MNCHW, conducted twice every year “is a high impact low-cost intervention offered to pregnant women and children below the age of five to increase coverage level of preventive and curative health indicators.”
He highlighted that the previous exercise conducted in January 2022 recorded huge success, with Vitamin A covering more than 88 per cent.
Tsanyawa expressed optimism that the current round of the exercise would also achieve greater impact, considering the government’s increased support.
He said Vitamin A supplements would be given to more than 3.1 million children, while over 2.8 million children would be dewormed.
There would also be childhood immunisation of about 68,135 children, while antenatal services would also be provided, the commissioner said.
Furthermore, the exercise would provide nutritional status screening for over three million children and birth registration would also be conducted.
The twin exercises would begin on July 5, and would last for four days.
(NAN)