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New polio eradication plan launched

Sudhir
Gupta, a member of the India PolioPlus Committee and past governor
of District 3100, immunizes four-year-old Sivi Sen against polio
at the Moradabad railway station in Uttar Pradesh. Photo by Allison
Kwesell
Rotary International
-- 12 July 2010
Rotary International
on FacebookThe World Health Organization and UNICEF cohosted a meeting
with Rotary International and other stakeholders in Geneva on 18 June
to launch the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) Strategic
Plan 2010-12.
The new plan comes at a critical time
for the GPEI. Key endemic countries are witnessing historic gains
against the disease. Nowhere is progress more evident than in Nigeria,
which has reported just three cases in 2010 as of 6 July compared
with 333 cases for the same period in 2009. India has reported 22
cases compared with 107 cases.
Across Africa, 10 of the 15 previously
polio-free countries reinfected in 2009 have stopped their outbreaks.
In May, the World Health Assembly welcomed
the new plan while expressing deep concern about the substantial funding
gap over the next three years. The shortfall is a serious risk to
ending polio and highlights the need for Rotary to reach its goal
of raising US$200 million.
WHO Director-General Margaret Chan
called on the international funding community to stand tall for polio
eradication. “The next three years, and especially the next
12 months, are critical to the polio eradication initiative and, by
extension, the entire international public health agenda.”
An essential element of the plan is
the bivalent oral polio vaccine, which is being used effectively against
wild poliovirus types 1 and 3 in all four endemic countries: Afghanistan,
India, Nigeria, and Pakistan. (Type 2 poliovirus has been eradicated.)
The plan also focuses on known polio
migration routes, which have made outbreaks of the disease largely
predictable. Aggressive synchronized immunization campaigns are now
being used to help prevent and stop outbreaks.
The partners of the GPEI are exploring
every option to secure fresh funding and are managing existing cash
flow to limit any threat to the eradication effort. The risk of not
stopping polio in endemic countries was made clear when a large outbreak
occurred in Tajikistan, caused by poliovirus that had spread from
India in early 2010. The outbreak has paralyzed 334 children as of
29 June. Tajikistan had been polio-free since 1997.
“The complete eradication of
polio is an absolute goal, and it requires absolute commitment from
us all,” says UNICEF Executive Director Tony Lake.
“Rotary believes the new strategic
plan provides the blueprint to achieving the goal of polio eradication,”
says Rotary Foundation Trustee Chair Carl-Wilhelm Stenhammar.
For more information on the polio eradication
effort and how to support it, visit rotary.org/endpolio

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