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Rotary International and Gates Foundation commit US$ 200 million to eradicate polio
Progress towards milestones for polio eradication
Wild poliovirus type 1 in steep decline worldwide
Behind the headlines in conflict zones, children still get their vaccine
GAVI re-programmes US$ 100 million to help complete polio eradication
2007 contributions and funding gap
Kuwait makes first contribution to polio eradication
G8 members re-commit to polio eradication, work remains to fulfil pledges
Publications and resources on www.polioeradication.org
Events
n 29 October, the Director-General of the
  transmission, children are
World Health Organization released her first six month report on new milestones to measure progress towards polio eradication. The interim report shows that the polio-affected countries are largely on track to meet the milestones by the end of the year, but that the mid-year financial milestone remains unmet: a US$ 60 million funding gap – needed to cover activities through the end of 2007 – still threatens the completion of eradication. In endemic countries: the number of polio-infected districts has fallen by 50% compared to 2006; in all but two of the nine “zones” of poliovirus
  either getting the same vaccination coverage as their peers in polio-free areas or are steadily catching up with them. Ten of the 13 countries with circulation of imported poliovirus in 2006 had stopped their outbreaks. Districts infected with type 1 poliovirus have declined by 75%.

The new milestones are central to The Case for Completing Polio Eradication. Requested by financial stake-holders, The Case outlines immediate actions for intensifying national and international eradication efforts and includes the milestones for measuring progress.
Shortly after her husband Haji Umaru Yar’Adua was elected President of Nigeria, First Lady Hajia Turai Yar’Adua (on left) stressed that immunization and child survival were high priorities for the country. While launching and taking part in vaccination campaigns in the northern state of Kebbi, she pledged, “We will do whatever we can to make Nigeria polio-free.” The First Lady was accompanied at far right by Titilola Koleoso-Adelekan, Executive Director of Nigeria’s National Primary Health Care Development Agency.
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n 26 November 2007, Rotary International
and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) announced a partnership to provide US$ 200 million over 4 years for the intensified push to eradicate polio. The BMGF has awarded the Rotary Foundation with one of its largest-ever challenge grants of US$ 100 million, which Rotary will match dollar-for-dollar over the coming three years.

Bill Gates, co-chair of the BMGF, commented: “The extraordinary dedication of Rotary members has played a critical role in bringing polio to the brink of eradication. Eradicating polio will be one of the
  most significant public health accomplishments in history, and we are committed to helping reach that goal.”

The exemplary leadership shown by Rotary Internatio-
nal and the BMGF is a heartening response to WHO Director-General Dr Margaret Chan’s call for funds made at a stakeholder consultation on polio eradication on 28 February 2007. It is hoped that this shared commitment will inspire and challenge other donors and polioaffected countries themselves to ensure that the financial resources necessary to eradicate polio once and for all are rapidly mobilized.
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• by end-2007 there should be a 50% reduction in the number of polio-infected districts relative to 2006.
Status: average 51% decline, with 75% decline in type 1 polio-infected districts.
• by end-2007, Oral Polio Vaccine coverage in the endemic transmission zones should be equal to or greater than in the polio-free zones.
Status: 7 of 9 transmission zones on track.
• Afghanistan: the proportion of zero-dose (nevervaccinated) children in the southern zone has increased from 4% in 2006 to 12% to date in 2007, due to deteriorating security.
• Nigeria: the proportion of zero-dose children in very high-risk, high-risk and medium high-risk transmission zones has declined from an average of 27% in 2006 to an average of 16% in 2007.
• by end-2007, countries with circulation of imported poliovirus in 2006 should have stopped their outbreaks*.
• Status: outbreaks stopped in 10 of 13 countries.

* i.e. most recent case was before April 2007.
32 of 36 separate importations have been
stopped in the 13 countries.
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. © WHO 2008. All rights reserved.
• by mid-2007 sufficient funding will have been pledged to finance all eradication activities planned through end-2007.
Status: missed, with US$ 60 million funding gap for 4th quarter 2007 activities.

Nota bene: represents figures available in October.
Sources on this page: WHO/UNICEF 2006 Joint Reporting Form (2005 for India); 2007 NPAFP cases 6-35 months old.
Data in WHO/HQ as of Sept 07. NPAFP cases with unknown OPV status excluded from analysis. Data on this page: as of 18 Sept 2007.
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n average across the endemic countries, the number of districts re-
porting type 1 poliovirus has declined by 75% since 2006. The poliovirus serotype with the highest paralytic attack rate and the greatest potential for international spread, type 1 has been the primary target of the eradication effort since 2006. Following the use of more effective monovalent oral polio vaccine against type 1 (mOPV1), no type 1 polio cases have been reported since October 2006 in the core highest-risk districts of western Uttar Pradesh, India, the epicentre of last year’s polio type 1 outbreak. In northern Nigeria, from where type 1 poliovirus caused international outbreaks from 2003 to 2006, the virus is down by 90%. In the remaining two endemic countries, type 1 is restricted largely to the cross-border
  area between north-western Pakistan and north- eastern Afghanistan.


The aggressive use of mOPV1 has – not unexpectedly – been accompanied by a rise in type 3 wild poliovirus. In western Uttar Pradesh, where the attack on type 1 has yielded historic results, the vast majority of cases are type 3. Anticipating this rise, countries have aimed for an equilibrium of vaccine use, alternating between mOPV1, mOPV3 and trivalent vaccine as demanded by the risk profile of an area. At its November 2007 meeting, the independent technical oversight body for polio eradication – the Advisory Committee on Polio Eradication – will examine further the issue of achieving the correct balance of vaccines.
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or the past year in Afghanistan, at least
80.000 children were unable to get their polio vaccine because their part of the country was in conflict and vaccinators could not reach them. In September, discussions through neutral mediators and directly with parties in conflict created safe access for vaccinators to reach these children. While international headli-
nes in conflict zones – from Sudan and Somalia to Afghanistan and Pakistan – count the dead, wounded and displaced, thousands of polio vaccinators and health workers in these countries quietly continue supplemen-
tary immunization and national surveillance activi-
ties at great personal risk.

Even with the safety mechanisms set up in September, the southern region of Afghanistan remains very dangerous – vaccinators risk their lives with every passage, and the geographic reach of the poliovirus mirrors the secu-
rity situation fairly closely. In Pakistan, polio eradica-
tion teams are creatively exploiting opportunities to vaccinate: as fighting in
  October in one of the Federally Administered Tri-
bal Areas of Pakistan forced 50.000 people to flee to safer ground, special vacci-
nation posts were set up for the arrivals. In both countries, if insecurity threa-
tens a vaccination campaign local vaccination teams continue to monitor the security situation in all areas to seize any opportunity of safe passage which might allow them to reach inaccessible areas and vaccinate the children. Chad, harbouring poliovirus of Nigerian origin, has continued eradication activi-
ties in the face of instability and resultant mass popula-
tion movements. These conditions have helped the poliovirus move into South Darfur, Sudan, where vaccination teams carry out their work despite the intense security challenges. Both countries host large numbers of travellers on their way to and from the pilgrimage to Mecca. Saudi Arabia has in place vaccination requirements for pilgrims from polio-infected areas in order to minimize the spread of polio following the pilgrimage.
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ne month after the WHO Director-General released the Case
for Completing Polio Eradication, the GAVI Fund Affiliate in June finalized a reprogramming of US$ 104.62 million – initially intended for a stockpile for polio vaccine once eradication is complete – into intensified polio eradication activities. While not a new contribution, this one-time gesture does ensure that polio funds are being used most strategically, and provides time for other donors to firm up pledges for 2008 activities. This re-programming complements new funding totalling US$ 41 million provided between May and August from Austria, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Liechtenstein, Monaco, New Zealand and the World Bank Partnership for Polio (for Pakistan), among others.
 
These contributions free up much-needed cash to maintain surveillance and carry out new activities in endemic and highrisk areas in the rest of the 2007 and give other donors time to confirm their pledges for 2008.



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  A father in Baluchistan province of Pakistan brings his child for polio vaccination. Communities such as his are nomads and often have little access to health care. Tracking the children of such families for polio vaccination requires special operational plans, which involve mapping their seasonal movements to ensure vaccinators reach each child in the right place at the right time.
 
 
* Estimate of 2007 US funds through WHO and UNICEF. Figure will be adjusted at year-end to include full Congressional allocation for polio eradication.
** AGFUND, Angola, Austria, Azerbaijan, Iceland, Kuwait, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, UAE, UN Foundation, UNICEF National Committees.
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uwait’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva,
Dharar Abdul-Razzak Razzooqi, presents US$ 1 million, his country’s first contribution for polio eradication, to WHO Director-General Margaret Chan.
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t their Heiligendamm Summit in June 2007, G8 leaders committed to make
utmost efforts in cooperation with international organizations and partners to eradicate polio and [to] work with others to close urgent funding shortfalls”.
  Only the United States, Germany and Russian Federation are on track to fulfil their 2005 Gleneagles commitment to ‘continue or increase’ polio funding for 2006-2008.
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Report of the Nigeria Expert Review Committee on Polio Eradication, November.
Report of the Pakistan-Afghanistan joint Technical Advisory Group on Polio Eradication, October.
Interim Report on Milestones for Polio Eradication, September.
GPEI Annual Report 2006, June.
The Case for Completing Polio Eradication, May.
WHA Resolution 60.14: Poliomyelitis: mechanism and management of potential risks to eradication, May.
Report of the India Expert Advisory Group on Polio Eradication, May.
 
• 27-28 November 2007: Advisory Committee on Polio Eradication, Geneva Switzerland. Discussions centre on use of appropriate monovalent and trivalent vaccine and responses to outbreaks of wild and circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses – and better diagnostics for the latter. On the research segment of the meeting, development of bivalent vaccine and progress towards a safer, affordable inactivated polio vaccine are on the agenda.
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The Global Eradication of Polio