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June
2010
All data as of 29 June 2010
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Strategic Plan 2010-2012 plan launched:
On 18 June, the new Global Polio Eradication Initiative
Strategic Plan 2010-2012 to eradicate wild poliovirus was launched at a key
stakeholder meeting. The Ministers of Health of Nigeria, Angola and Senegal,
among a number of other senior health ministry officials, existing and potential
funders, vaccine manufacturers and key partner organizations attended the event
– co-hosted by WHO Director-General Margaret Chan and UNICEF Executive Director
Tony Lake–to discuss the implementation, monitoring, economics and financing of
the new Plan. Mr Lake called on the gathering to "act with an eye to results: we
must all dedicate ourselves to writing this final chapter and closing the book
on polio forever. For every child."
More
Funding gap threatens: While
stakeholders fully endorsed the range of approaches and new tools in the new
strategic plan – which are already showing positive results – a $1.3 billion
funding gap is forcing a reprioritization of further planned activities to
respond to the outbreaks in west Africa. Demand for oral polio vaccine (OPV) has
recently gone up, due to the outbreak in Tajikistan, resultant activity in that
country and its neighbours and the continued needs for supplementary
immunization activities in west Africa. This demand has absorbed much of the
flexible funding held for emergencies. While additional funds are expected later
in the third quarter, activities planned for July and August in particular may
require some adjustments. Decisions to delay or curtail some activities are
being made based on epidemiology, protecting activities in highest-risk areas
(endemic countries and those with re-established transmission).
Details
Tajikistan conducts multiple immunization rounds to
rapidly raise immunity: Tajikistan has held four
short-interval rounds of polio vaccination activities to rapidly raise childhood
immunity in response to an outbreak now totalling 334 polio cases (data in WHO
headquarters as of 29 June). The size of the outbreak means that Tajikistan
accounts for more than 70% of all polio cases in the world this year. The
Tajikistan experience reaffirms the imperative of completing polio eradication:
until polio is eradicated, any country is at risk of an importation, and high
population immunity is the only protection against a large outbreak.
Africa aims to kick polio out forever:
Africa accounts for 13% of all cases this year - largely due
to the impressive 99% reduction in cases in Nigeria. In Chad, President Idriss
Deby Itno delayed his departure for an official international visit in order to
personally express his firm commitment to eradicating polio by signing Rotary's
Kick Polio Out of Africa football, which has captured the imagination of
Africa's political leaders in the lead-up to the World Cup.
Studies give new insight into polio eradication:
The New England Journal of Medicine published in June two
studies on polio eradication which look at long-term OPV use and at fractional
inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) dosage, offering useful new insights both for
the pre- and post-eradication era. The first study reaffirms that circulating
vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV) is as transmissible and paralytic as wild
poliovirus, supporting the strategy of responding to cVDPV outbreaks in the same
way as wild poliovirus outbreaks. The second study, part of evaluating a variety
of approaches to achieve affordable IPV options for the post-OPV era, shows that
fractional doses of IPV are as effective in immunizing children as full doses of
IPV. The need to effectively manage cVDPVs both in the pre- and post-eradication
eras, and the importance of pursuing strategies to reduce the cost of IPV for
the post-eradication era, were underscored in an accompanying editorial.
Details.
Afghanistan
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In response to
a wild poliovirus type 1 case in Kandahar (onset of paralysis on 23 May), a
mop-up vaccination campaign was held in five districts of Kandahar Province
with bivalent oral polio vaccine (bOPV) from 29 June to 1 July, targeting
more than 330,000 children under five. Various discussions are ongoing with
relevant parties who can play a part in reaching children the inaccessible
areas.
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A mop-up was also held in the northern areas bordering Tajikistan from 1-3
June, in synchronization with Tajikistan. These immunization activities
book- ended sub-national Immunization Days (SNIDs) from 7-9 June, with bOPV
administered in the Southern, South-Eastern and Eastern Regions. While
access improved across Southern Region, Taliban obstruction was reported in
the east, in Nuristan and Kunar, where it remains difficult to reach many
areas across dangerous terrain due to heavy mining on roads among other
things. Four permanent vaccination posts have been established in the
districts bordering Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, Due to the deteriorating
security situation in Kandahar, both WHO Southern Region team leaders and
UNICEF Chief of Zonal office have been relocated and neighbouring countries
to Kabul.
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In keeping with the recommendations of the Technical Advisory Group, a
communication planning workshop was held and clear timelines established for
finalizing and implementing district-specific communication plans for the 13
persistent-transmission districts before the start of the next SNID planned
for 25 July. A separate meeting was held in Kabul to finalize
district-specific operational plans for three of these 13 districts with the
aim of improving quality and increasing access to all children.
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The next SNIDs are planned for 25 July, again using bOPV.
India
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India's extraordinary reduction in case numbers has continued, with no cases
of type 1 reported in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar since November 2009. India is
completing SNIDs in June and early July, using bOPV in western Uttar
Pradesh, central Bihar and high-risk destination states for mobile
populations (in Bihar, the SNIDs were officially inaugurated by the
Honourable Chief Minister Shri Nitish Kumar); a mop-up round with mOPV1 is
being conducted in districts of Bihar that border Nepal. With the monsoon
season upon us, the SNIDs are the last large-scale campaigns before
September, though staggered mop-ups are planned throughout July, using a mix
of bOPV, monovalent OPV type 1 (mOPV1) and monovalent OPV type 3 (mOPV3).
-
India is responding swiftly to two recent type 1 cases in West Bengal, with
central government representatives dispatched to the district, together with
nine Surveillance Medical Officers from the East Region, in order to rapidly
close the gaps in SIA quality in that district. A large-scale mop-up in West
Bengal using mOPV1 was held on 13 June (with another to follow on 11 July).
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The Government of Delhi is moving forward with a plan to expand the list of
construction sites in the state covered during SIAs and surveillance in
attempts to ensure India's migrant populations are adequately covered during
immunization activities.
Nigeria
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Like India, Nigeria is enjoying a dramatic reduction in wild poliovirus
cases, with no new cases reported in June.
-
Mr Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, travelled
to Nigeria in June to meet with political and traditional leaders, including
President Goodluck Jonathan and state governors. Mr. Gates applauded the
tremendous efforts being undertaken in Nigeria to eradicate polio, and
highlighted those efforts needed to continue to finish polio eradication
once and for all. During his visit, a group representing business,
political, religious, women's, medical, non-governmental and media
communities came together to sign the 'Polio Eradication Pledge',
recognizing the remaining challenges to securing a polio-free Nigeria and
promising to work to leverage support for the programme. Mr Gates' visit
also coincided with a meeting of the northern traditional leaders committee
in Jigawa State, where the leaders reaffirmed their full commitment to
ensure the highest possible coverage in all the northern states.
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The June IPDs saw a significant scale-up of the Majigi - a community
mobilization strategy using locally adapted films to emphasize to parents
the importance of ensuring every child is vaccinated.
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Staggered sub-national Immunization Plus Days (IPDs) were held in June,
allowing the re-allocation of technical resources to support highest-risk
areas.
-
IPDs in July will for the first time focus on 106 of the highest-risk Local
Government Areas (LGAs), with these targeted district-specific approaches a
key pillar of the newly-launched strategic plan.
Pakistan
-
Pakistan continues to regularly report cases, although the 27 cases reported
to date are from just 12 towns, districts or agencies (from Tribal Agencies/
Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Peshawar and adjoining districts in
North West Frontier Province, Quetta block in Balochistan and Karachi in
Sindh).
-
Mop-up vaccination campaigns were held with mOPV 1 from 14-16 June in
response to recent cases, and special SIAs have been held in Karachi,
targeting underserved population groups, and in persistently-infected
'union-councils' (sub-districts) of Killa Abdullah district in Balochistan,
with additional technical support deployed to support the planning,
implementing and monitoring of the activities.
-
Environmental surveillance in Karachi continues to detect poliovirus. The
most recent positive sample is the fourth since May, and while no type 1
polio cases have yet been detected in Karachi, this underscores the risk
that ongoing transmission poses to this key urban reservoir.
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The next National Immunization Days (NIDs) are to be held 12-14 July.
Re-ESTABLISHED TRANSMISSION Countries
Angola
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Angola has type 1 transmission in the northern states
of Lunda Norte and Lunda Sul, mining areas bordering Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC). With frequent population movements across the border, the risk
of international spread remains high.
-
Mop-up activities in these states using mOPV1 have been
held, synchronized with southern DRC, following National Immunization Days (NIDs)
using trivalent OPV (tOPV). Independent monitoring suggests a high
proportion of children were missed during the mop-up, with upwards of 20% of
children not reached. Strengthened technical support is focusing on
addressing operational issues for future campaigns, such as better
microplanning and more effective vaccinator selection and training, and
supervision.
-
With Angola rapidly becoming the greatest risk to polio eradication in
Africa, it is essential that all tiers of government commit to urgently
address vaccination coverage gaps. Angola's Minister of Health, Dr José
Vieira Dias Van-Dúnem, attended the launch of the Strategic Plan in Geneva
and promised that the Ministry was working to improve the quality of
vaccination campaigns.
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The next NIDs are tentatively planned for 30 July to 1 August, using bOP.
Cameroon
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The first case of the year has been reported in Cameroon, from Extreme Nord
province, bordering Borno state in Nigeria and Chad (greater N'Djamena
area). There have been no cases reported in Nigeria's Borno state since July
2009.
-
An outbreak response is currently being finalized, potentially in
synchronization with Chad and Nigeria.
Chad
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Chad continues to focus on improving SIA operations in key areas,
particularly in the greater N'Djamena area (the epicentre of transmission in
the country) with renewed Government commitment being reflected by continued
operational improvements. In particular, more effective microplanning and
vaccinator performance was observed.
-
Staggered NIDs are ongoing through June with most of the country having
conducted the activity from 7-9 June, Chari Baguirmi conducting activities
last week and N'Djamena conducting activities from 20-27 June. Focus remains
on addressing operational gaps. Further activities are planned for July,
October and November.
Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC)
-
As of 24 June, DRC has been polio-free for 12 months. However, a recent
cluster of cases in north-eastern Angola, close to DRC's border, underlines
the need to raise childhood immunity to protect against wild poliovirus
importations.
-
Proposed SIAs are SNIDs in July and August (with bOPV and tOPV,
respectively). The geographic extent of these activities is currently under
review, following detection of cases in north-eastern Angola and detection
of additional vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV).
Tajikistan and
neighbouring countries
-
The outbreak in Tajikistan has affected 334 people, and now accounts for
over 70% of all cases worldwide. While the number of newly-detected acute
flaccid paralysis (AFP) cases continues to decline, suggesting the outbreak
has peaked, 188 AFP cases remain pending for laboratory confirmation, and so
the number of reported cases is still expected to rise.
-
Four NIDs have now been conducted with mOPV1, using the Short-Interval
Additional Dose strategy to rapidly raise immunity.
-
Neighbouring countries continue to take precautionary measures: Uzbekistan
has held two nationwide campaigns and is planning further SIAs from 5-9
July; children living in the bordering provinces of Afghanistan have been
vaccinated twice since the outbreak was reported; while Kyrgyzstan will
conduct SIAs 19-23 July,, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan are also planning
immunization activities in July and August, respectively..
-
In Russia, type 1 wild poliovirus has been isolated in six individuals with
AFP: the genetic sequencing of the viruses show they are related to the one
circulating in Tajikistan. Case investigations are ongoing to determine
where and when infection occurred. Control measures and heightened
surveillance are in place.
Nepal
-
In April and June, Nepal reported two type 1 polio cases from districts
bordering India. The genetic sequencing suggests two separate importations
of viruses originating in Bihar, India.
-
NIDs were held on 10 April and 22-23 May, using bivalent OPV. SNIDs were
conducted on 19-20 June, covering the districts boarding India and the
Kathmandu valley, using mOPV1. Additional campaigns are planned for July.
West Africa
-
The bulk of West African cases in 2010 (18 of 29 cases) are from Senegal,
with other cases being reported from Liberia, Mauritania, Mali, Niger and
Sierra Leone. However, the number of cases being reported is rapidly
dwindling, thanks to repeated multi-country immunization activities. From 25
June, for instance, SIAs were synchronized across six countries: Senegal,
Mauritania, Mali, Liberia, Burkina Faso and Gambia. Guinea briefly postponed
its activities due to elections, and will hold its immunization activities
on 2 July.
-
Guinea poses a particular risk, due to sub-national AFP surveillance gaps
(meaning undetected polio circulation can not be ruled out). Additionally,
viruses recently found in neighbouring countries (Mali and Liberia)
originated in Guinea. Additional technical support was provided to the
country and a series of basic improvements are being put in place, such as
systematic coverage in markets and transit areas, better recording of missed
children and stronger first-line supervision.
-
All countries have conducted at least three SIAs since detection of their
latest respective cases and some have conducted five.
Horn of Africa
-
No wild poliovirus cases have been reported across the Horn of Africa for
2010. While on 27 June, Sudan was officially polio-free for more than 12
months, the risk remains of undetected circulation of poliovirus as a result
of sub-national surveillance gaps in some areas, including parts of southern
Sudan. Recent efforts have improved and helped fill these gaps, and this
progress is being consolidated to rule out circulation with certainty or
rapidly detect any cases.
-
In southern Sudan, efforts at strengthening routine immunization continue,
with training concluded in June for all 10 state and 79 county (district)
cold chain officers/assistants on vaccine and cold chain management,
including for polio SIAs as well as the reverse cold chain for AFP
surveillance.
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On 21-23 June, 2010 northern Sudan carried out its first Child Health Days
campaign for 2010. The interventions provided, house-to-house, were oral
polio vaccine, vitamin A, de-worming tablets, awareness messages on child
protection and peace promotion.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
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. |