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December 2009 &
January 2010
All data as of 2 February 2010.
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WHO Executive Board points way forward on new
three-year Programme of Work: Delegates expressed strong support for
finishing the job of polio eradication and finalizing a new three-year Programme
of Work to do so, despite a particularly challenging year epidemiologically in
2009. After hearing a report from the Chair of the Independent Evaluation of
Major Barriers to Interrupting Poliovirus Transmission and frankly
acknowledging the remaining hurdles, delegates noted other, positive outcomes of
2009, in particular the impact of tactical and scientific innovations in each
endemic area and the development and introduction of a new, bivalent, oral polio
vaccine.
Funding a major barrier as Programme of Work
consultation advances: Of note, the discussion at the Executive Board did
not extend to the resources required to finish the job: conservative January
budget estimates for 2010-2012 top US$ 2.1 billion, against which there is a
funding gap of at least US$ 875 million. To secure ownership at all levels and
across all sectors for polio eradication, the Global Polio Eradication
Initiative is consulting widely with both polio-affected countries and members
of the international development community in the development of the Programme of Work 2010-2012,
which is to be presented to the World Health Assembly in May 2010.
Type 1 declines dramatically in Nigeria: Cases of type 1 in 2009 have dropped by 90% over 2008. In Kano State, no type 1
cases have been detected in the past 12 months, despite strong disease
surveillance.
Bivalent oral polio vaccine (bOPV) reaches India
and Nigeria: India used bOPV for the first time in Bihar during National
Immunization Days starting 10 January. Nigeria became the first African country
to use bOPV in the national 30 January Immunization Plus Days. Both countries
follow Afghanistan, which first used the vaccine on 16 December 2009.
Preparations start for multi-country campaigns
in Africa: On 6 March, Nigeria and 15 other west African countries will be
joined by Cameroon, Central African Republic (CAR) and Chad, to vaccinate 85.5
million children and boost immunity across the "importation belt."
WHO African Regional Office leadership
highlights Chad risk: The Regional Director of the WHO Regional Office for
Africa in December convened an extraordinary consultation with the Ministries of
Health of Nigeria, Chad, Angola and DRC to review the findings of the
Independent Evaluation on the Major Barriers to Interrupting Poliovirus
Transmission. Chaired by the RD for its
entire 10-hour length, the consultation recognized the particular risk posed by
Chad, now the country with the highest number of cases in Africa in the past six
months (53), with an expanding type 3 outbreak.
Grants available for polio research: Driven by the need to
evaluate innovative mechanisms to close remaining immunity gaps in remaining
polio-affected areas, the Polio Research Committee is soliciting research
proposals (by 30 March) with particular focus on understanding mucosal immunity
in India and addressing low vaccine coverage in Nigeria. Please visit the
research page.
India
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Only one genetic lineage of type 1 wild poliovirus survives in India (as
compared to seven lineages in 2007), and the priority remains the rapid
interruption of this serotype.
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While both Bihar and Uttar Pradesh have – at different times – successfully
interrupted type 1 transmission in the past, this success has never been
simultaneous, and each state has subsequently re-infected the other. The
current low levels of this serotype in both states are encouraging.
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Special outreach strategies to vaccinate children in migratory/ mobile
populations are being strengthened to achieve high coverage in these high
risk populations.
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107 high-risk blocks have been identified across western Uttar Pradesh and
Bihar, and a special "107 block plan" plan is being finalized for these
blocks that will overcome the remaining challenges to eliminate polio. The
plan envisages not only ensuring the highest quality polio immunization
activity and strengthening routine immunization services in these blocks but
also launching new initiatives to address factors contributing to poliovirus
transmission such as interventions to improve water and sanitation
conditions and reducing prevalence of diarrhea through promotion of ORS and
zinc..
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Rotary International bestowed its prestigious 'Polio Eradication Champion
Award' to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, for his personal engagement and
commitment to polio eradication in the state. Under his leadership,
strengthened focus is being given to activities in the high-risk blocks of
Bihar, and on reaching populations in hard-to-reach areas such as the Kosi
river basin.
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The Government of India used bOPV for the first time in Bihar in the 10
January National Immunization Days (NIDs). The majority of the country used
trivalent OPV while a few areas used monovalent type 1 or type 3 as a part
of the mop up responses.
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The NIDs in January were inaugurated in the capital by the President of
India, Pratibha Patil. Other notable events included the administration of
OPV by the Dalai Lama at Bodh Gaya in Bihar and the NID launches in the
state of Maharashtra by the Union Minister of Health, Mr Ghulam Nabi Azad
and in Delhi by the Chief Minister of Delhi at her residence. Indian
billionaire Lakshmi Mittal and his wife along with Rajashree Birla and
senior Rotarians from India inaugurated a Rotary Health Camp in Delhi.
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A second round of NIDs is scheduled for 7 February.
Nigeria
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A year has passed since the onset of paralysis
of the most recent case of type 1 polio in Kano state (23 January 2009) in
northern Nigeria, once the epicentre of polio in the country and the source
of multi-country outbreaks. A type 3 outbreak in the country, however, has
led to 101 cases in Kano alone in 2009.
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The sharp decline in cases nationwide (50%
overall and 90% in type 1) compared with 2008 is likely a result of the
operational improvements achieved this year during Immunization Plus Days
(IPDs) thanks to strengthened engagement by local-level political,
traditional and religious leadership.
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Transmission also appears to have slowed
considerably in the past six months. Since August 2009, Nigeria has reported
13 cases of wild poliovirus.
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In December, an integrated campaign with OPV
and insecticide treated bed-nets took place in Kebbi and Sokoto, where it
was officially launched by the Sultan of Sokoto.
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While analysis from the most recent IPDs in
November again suggests operational improvements were achieved, high quality
was not consistent everywhere. In some high-risk local government areas, key
operational challenges continue to mar the quality of activities.
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The Northern Traditional and Religious Leaders
Forum for Primary Healthcare and Polio Eradication held its first meeting of
the year on 14 January, attended by the Federal Minister of Health and the
Executive Director of the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency.
Citing the pivotal role of the traditional leadership in garnering local
support and reaching children, the Minister of Health said, "What I'm
setting for 2010 is collaboration with you, looking to your leadership. We
shall drag polio from Nigeria this year."
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National IPDs were held starting 30 January,
using bOPV. This is the first use of bOPV on the African continent. Northern
states will hold a vaccination campaign on 6 March to coordinate with the
15-country west Africa SIAs.
Pakistan
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Sub-national Immunization Days (SNIDs) took
place on 14 and 21 December using mOPV1. The activity was staggered in
Punjab – to allow the movement of experienced staff to assure high quality –
and postponed in Balochistan due to a strike by paramedics. Some areas of
NWFP/Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) were again inaccessible. A
Short Interval Additional Dose (SIAD) round is planned in some of these
areas, as and when a window of opportunity for access is identified.
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The most recent SNIDs were launched on 18
January with high-level participation including the President and the
Minister of Health as well as senior political leadership in Lahore.
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120 journalists from FATA have taken part in
2009 in 'Re-thinking Journalism' training as part of UNICEF support to
Ministry of Health efforts to engage the media. The training focuses on
getting health issues in the headlines, with particular focus on polio.
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Two new initiatives being explored are: the
scale up of community-based polio eradication activities for surveillance
and social mobilization being piloted in two agencies of FATA where access
is compromised; and the increased involvement of the Pathan community in
Karachi, whose movements to and from NWFP are important in the spread of
virus.
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On 25 January, key religious leaders from
across the country convened in Islamabad as part of the Inter-religious
Council for Health project, to promote the importance of polio eradication,
immunization and overall maternal and child health. In the coming months,
key influential people at the federal, provincial and district/agency level
will be working to harness the support of religious leaders at the community
level.
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Sindh Governor Dr Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan expressed
concern at the number of polio cases in the province. "Problems should not
be made an excuse for polio," he said while chairing a high-level meeting on
23 January, "but should be solved with wisdom and all capabilities." He
announced the formation of Community Service Coordination Committees, aimed
at promoting a cross-sectoral approach to polio eradication at every level.
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The next NIDs are planned for 15-17 February,
possibly using bOPV and coordinated with SNIDs in southern Afghanistan.
Afghanistan
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Afghanistan became the first country in the
world to use bOPV during SIAs for polio on 15-17 December 2009.
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Focus is again on increasing access in the 13
districts with persistent transmission, in the Southern Region. Due to
insecurity, access to all children in these districts continues to be the
main challenge (upwards of 20% of children have never been vaccinated in
these districts).
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A planning meeting was held in January to
create district-specific plans for these 13 districts, based on the local
culture, local partners and nature of the conflict.
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A December 2009 case is the first from
Nangarhar Province in the Eastern Region of Afghanistan since November 2008
and is related to both to
virus circulating in the
Kandahar
area and
in Punjab in Pakistan . A mop-up took
place in the province, targeting all 400,000 children under five years of
age with bOPV on 24-26 January.
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The next SIAs are Sub-national Immunization
Days (SNIDs) planned for 14-16 February, in coordination with Pakistan.
West Africa
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The countries in west Africa reporting cases of
polio in the past 12 months are: Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte
d'Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania,
Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo. All are
type 1 except in Niger, which has one type 1 case and 14 type 3 cases.
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Senegal's first cases of polio since 1998
represent an importation from neighbouring Mauritania. In response to the
importation, large-scale outbreak response mop-ups are planned in Senegal
and Mauritania on 12 and 15 February respectively, with mOPV1. Senegal
benefits from high routine immunization levels.
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This most recent country to join the west
Africa outbreak underscores the ongoing risk in the region. In particular,
intense transmission appears to be continuing in Guinea and Mauritania.
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Cases have been reported within the past six
months from Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia, Mali,
Mauritania, Senegal and Sierra Leone.
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A synchronized immunization response was held
on 4 December in Burkina Faso, Mali and Côte d'Ivoire, using mOPV1, followed
by Mauritania on 8 and 22 December, Guinea on 12 December and Liberia on 14
December. Mauritania and Senegal are holding SIAs on 15 and 12 February
respectively, with mOPV1.
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Multi-country SIAs are taking
place starting 6 March, targeting 85.5 million children across 15 west
African countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia,
Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal,
Sierra Leone and Togo) as well as Cameroon, Central African Republic (CAR),
Chad and Nigeria.
Horn of Africa
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No cases have been reported across the Horn of Africa since July 2009.
Uganda has not recorded a case since 10 May, Sudan's last case
had onset of paralysis on 27 June and Kenya's on 30 July.
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All cases
across the Horn have been followed by at least two rounds of SIAs.
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Although
no new cases have been reported from the region since July, sub-national
surveillance gaps persist and undetected circulation cannot be ruled out.
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The most recent SIAs in the region were held in southern Sudan on 7 December
and in northern Sudan from 14 December, with both areas using trivalent OPV.
Community mobilization supported by UNICEF included mobile announcers,
church and radio announcements. Inauguration ceremonies took place in four
states of northern Sudan while West Darfur held a carnival. The Federal
Minister of Health launched the campaign in South Kordofan while the
Undersecretary of the Federal Ministry of Health launched the ceremony in
South Kordofan. All the ceremonies were attended by the state ministers of
health, state commissioners, Director Generals of state ministries of
health, Directors of Primary Health care, senior paediatricians and members
of the legislative council, women's unions and EPI management. The campaign
received good media coverage by national and state TV and Radio as well as
newsletters.
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A
coordination meeting for the Horn of Africa is planned to take place in
Nairobi on 5-6 March, followed by a meeting of the Technical Advisory Group
on 8-9 March.
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Both southern and northern
Sudan are holding campaigns – on 17 February and 22 February respectively,
using mOPV1 in the south and bOPV in the north.
Angola, DR Congo,
Burundi
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In Angola, SNIDs were held on 11-13 December, using mOPV1, in Benguela,
Bengo, Cuanza Sul, Cuanza Norte and Luanda. The next SIAs in Angola are
planned to be nationwide in June, using mOPV1, followed by rounds in July
and August.
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While all cases have now been followed by three rounds of campaigns, serious
operational flaws in the quality of SIAs in 2009 have led to the
re-established transmission of wild poliovirus in Angola.
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SIAs were held on 17 November
in Burundi, Rwanda and the province of South Kivu in DRC, and on 26 November
in North Kivu. SNIDs are planned in DRC for May and June.
Chad, CAR,
Cameroon
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Chad is now the country in Africa with the highest number of cases in the
past six months (53). The type 3 outbreak is now spreading across the
country. (Additionally, due to sub-national surveillance gaps, undetected
circulation of type 1 cannot be ruled out.)
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The outbreak has persisted as outbreak response has been inadequate in
timeliness, scale and quality. SIAs continue to be marred by significant
operational challenges, with as many as 50% of children missed, particularly
in the greater N'Djamena area. Political engagement at every level is
urgently needed.
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At the consultation chaired by the Regional Director of the WHO African
Regional Office (AFRO), there was consensus among the Member States and AFRO
to enhance national financing, international resource mobilization,
cross-border coordination (especially of SIAs), the translation of national
political will into action at the local level, independent monitoring of SIA
coverage, social mobilization and engagement of civil society.
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Chad has not had an SIA since October 2009. SNIDs planned for 4 December
were cancelled at the last minute. The next SIAs are nation-wide on 5
February. Chad will also take part in the multi-country SIAs starting 6
March and has rounds planned for April, October and November.
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In Cameroon, NIDs using
trivalent OPV were held 4 December. In CAR, a second round of Child Health
Day immunizations were held from 26-30 December with trivalent OPV for under
five-year olds nationwide. An accelerated routine immunization campaign is
scheduled for end January. Both countries are taking part in the
multi-country SIAs starting 6 March.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Polio eradication will only succeed if the necessary funds are made
available, and with strong political commitment in polio-affected countries.
More than 10 million children will be paralysed in the next 40 years if the
world fails to capitalize on its >US$8 billion global investment in eradication. |