Press
Centre
Polio pushed to lowest levels in history
BUT EXPERTS WARN OPPORTUNITY TO STAMP
OUT DISEASE MUST BE GRASPED NOW DUE TO UNSTABLE GLOBAL
SITUATION
WASHINGTON/LONDON/GENEVA/NAIROBI/NEW YORK, 16 April 2002
- With only 537 polio cases reported globally in 2001,
efforts to eradicate the disease have driven the incidence
of polio to its lowest point in history. However the expert
panel overseeing the initiative warns that given the current
prevalence of armed conflict, the last vestiges of polio
must be extinguished now, as any delays will jeopardize
the success of the entire effort.
"When we began the eradication effort in 1988, polio
paralysed more than 1000 children each day. In 2001, there
were far fewer than 1000 cases for the entire year,"
said Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, the Director-General of
the World Health Organization. "But we're not finished
yet and the past year has reminded us that we live in
a world where security and access to children cannot be
guaranteed. So I urge the world to finish the job. Eradicate
polio while we still have the opportunity."
From 2000 to 2001, efforts of the Global Polio Eradication
Initiative, spearheaded by the World Health Organization,
Rotary International, US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and UNICEF, have reduced the number of polio-endemic
countries from 20 to 10. The number of new cases globally
was slashed by more than 80%, from 2979 in 2000 to 537
in 2001.* This represents a greater than 99.8% reduction
since 1988, when polio paralysed more than 350 000 children
in 125 countries.
The Global Polio Eradication Technical Consultative Group
(TCG), which completed its annual review of the programme
last week, noted that the three zones with the highest
poliovirus transmission - northern India, Afghanistan/Pakistan,
and Nigeria/Niger continue to pose the greatest risk to
the programme. However, the TCG also warned that despite
progress in the conflict-affected areas, polio eradication
could become a victim to recent global events. The TCG
noted, for example, that Afghanistan's polio surveillance
system had suffered over the last few months.
"The re-establishment of an effective polio eradication
programme in Afghanistan should be a global priority.
All partners, including all UN agencies and the provisional
government there, must ensure the job of eradicating polio
from Afghanistan is completed and that regional and global
progress are not threatened," the TCG stated.
The ten remaining endemic countries, in order of highest
to lowest transmission, are: India, Pakistan, Nigeria,
Afghanistan, Niger, Somalia, Egypt, Angola, Ethiopia and
Sudan.*
"Each of these countries has made tremendous progress,
but each has its own unique set of challenges," said
Carol Bellamy, Executive Director of UNICEF (United Nations
Children's Fund). "Throughout the battle to rid the
world of polio, we have managed to reach children living
i some of the most remote and challenging circumstances
imaginable. Over the coming days and months, we must continue
this unprecedented effort, using all of our resources
to reach the very last child with polio vaccine. We now
have a unique opportunity to deliver a truly global victory
in an uncertain world. We owe it to our children to get
the job done."
Countries which appear to have recently stopped transmission
include former 'global poliovirus reservoirs' Bangladesh
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where wild poliovirus
has not been isolated for well over a year. DR Congo,
despite the ongoing conflict, has immunized over 11 million
children in national immunization days and rapidly improved
surveillance, resulting in a reduction in the number of
confirmed cases from 603 to zero in just 12 months.
Worldwide in 2001 more than 575 million children under
five years of age were vaccinated in 94 countries as part
of the global effort to eradicate polio. Vaccinators,
numbering over 10 million, went house-to-house, boat-to-boat,
across borders, through rivers and over mountain ranges
to find and immunize every child under five years of age,
often in internationally-coordinated immunization activities.
With the end-2002 target for stopping polio transmission
worldwide looming, successful National Immunization Days
this spring will be essential. Several of the remaining
endemic countries (Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria, India,
Somalia, Sudan) are undertaking mass immunization campaigns
this week, as part of their final push to eliminate the
virus.
"The message from the TCG was that we have all the
right strategies and tools to exterminate this virus.
We know the exact locations, ages, and even the names
of almost every child who was stricken by polio last year.
In other words, we know the areas where we have to do
the hardest work," said Dr Steven Cochi, Director
of the Global Immunization Division of the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Finishing the job requires more funding
Despite the challenges in these remaining countries,
the TCG found that the greatest threat to the eradication
initiative is now the funding gap. Substantial donations
from Canada, the Netherlands, Japan, the United States,
the United Kingdom and others have helped reduce the funding
gap from US$ 400 million to US$ 275 million over the past
year. Of the US$1 billion required for the programme between
2002-2005, US$ 725 million have been pledged or are projected.
Rotary International helped to spark this global movement
when it launched its first fundraising drive in 1985 with
the goal of immunizing every child throughout the world
against polio by its 100th anniversary in 2005. "Now
that we are approaching our goal, we need just US$ 275
million to finish the job," said Luis Vicente Giay,
Chairman of The Rotary Foundation of Rotary International.
"If we raise this money now, we will be saving all
of humankind from this disease for all time, and that's
priceless."
Since 1985, Rotary International has contributed US$
462 million to polio eradication. The non-profit, humanitarian
service organization, with 1.2 million members in 163
countries, is launching its second major fundraising drive
among its membership to raise an additional US$ 80 million.
Rotary will also continue its advocacy work, which has
helped raise approximately US$ 1 billion from donor governments
and additional funds from the private sector in cooperation
with the United Nations Foundation.
About Polio
Poliomyelitis (polio) is a highly infectious disease caused
by a virus that mainly affects children under five years
of age. It invades the nervous system and can cause total
paralysis in a matter of hours. The virus enters the body
through the mouth and multiplies in the intestine. Initial
symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness
in the neck and pain in the limbs. One in 200 infections
leads to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs).
Amongst those paralysed, 5%-10% die when their breathing
muscles become immobilized.
There is no cure for polio, it can only be prevented.
Polio vaccine, given multiple times, can protect a child
for life.
The polio eradication coalition includes governments
of countries affected by polio; private foundations (e.g.
United Nations Foundation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation);
development banks (e.g. World Bank); donor governments
(e.g. Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland,
Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
Norway, the United States of America and the United Kingdom);
the European Commission; humanitarian and nongovernmental
organizations (e.g. the International Red Cross and Red
Crescent societies) and corporate partners (e.g. Aventis
Pasteur, De Beers). Volunteers in developing countries
also play a key role; 10 million have participated in
mass immunization campaigns.
______________________________________________________________________
High resolution photographs can be downloaded from www.who.int/multimedia.
A video news release including B-roll will be broadcast
at 12.05 hours GMT on the European Broadcasting Union
feed.
For further information, please contact:
Christine McNab, WHO, Geneva (+41 22) 791 4688, mobile:
+41 79 254 6815 mcnabc@who.int;
Claudia Drake, WHO, Geneva (+41 22) 791 3832, mobile:
(+41 79) 475 5471, drakec@who.int;
Vivian Fiore, Rotary International, Chicago (+1 847) 866
3234, fiorev@rotaryintl.org;
Steven Stewart, CDC, Atlanta , (+1 404) 639 8327, znc4@cdc.gov;
Joanne Bailey, UNICEF, New York (+1 212) 326 7566; jbailey@unicef.org
Global Polio Eradication Initiative Information: See
www.polioeradication.org, Rotary International's PolioPlus
site at http://www.rotary.org,
www.cdc.gov or the polio
site on www.unicef.org.
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