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December 2006 Data as of
28 November 2006
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Headlines
- New
Director-General of World Health Organization pledges to eradicate polio:
Dr Margaret Chan of China was appointed WHO Director-General in Geneva on 9
November 2006. During her first address to the World Health Assembly, Dr
Chan vowed: "We will complete polio eradication". Before this appointment as
Director-General, Dr Chan was Assistant Director-General for Communicable
Diseases. Dr Chan has been with WHO since 2003, and her career in public
health spans 30 years. Dr Chan's appointment follows the sudden death of
Director-General Dr LEE Jong-wook in May.
- Independent body
says polio eradication is feasible in the four remaining polio endemic
countries, citing added advantages of powerful new eradication tools:
In October, the Advisory Committee
for Polio Eradication (ACPE) highlighted in October that the monovalent oral
polio vaccines (mOPVs), available since mid-2005, provide immunity more
rapidly than the standard trivalent OPV and that new laboratory diagnostic
procedures can detect and confirm polio infection twice as quickly, enabling
a more rapid outbreak response.
- The ACPE commended
the engagement of Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai,
who recently took oversight for polio eradication in the country. The ACPE
highlighted the need for head of state oversight in Nigeria, India and
Pakistan to ensure that during polio campaigns every child is immunized.
- Saudi Arabian
health directives for Hajj include polio vaccination for pilgrims:
The Ministry of Health of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia recommends that all Hajj travellers from the
remaining polio-endemic countries Nigeria, India, Afghanistan and Pakistan -
irrespective of age and previous immunization history - be immunized with
oral polio vaccine (OPV) prior to departure for Saudi Arabia. All travellers
from these countries - irrespective of age and previous immunization status
- will also be required to receive an additional dose of OPV upon arrival in
Saudi Arabia. Similar vaccination requirements are being applied to all
persons under the age of 15 years, arriving from polio-infected countries.
- Funding shortfall:
Outbreak response activities
have put a tremendous strain on the financial resources of the Global Polio
Eradication Initiative. US$ 50 million is urgently needed by December for
activities in the first quarter of 2007, with US$ 390 million still required
for the balance of 2007 and 2008.
Country Focus
Nigeria
- In 2006, northern Nigeria continues to
account for the majority of global cases (1004 of 1723 cases). Six
states in the north of the country - Bauchi, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano,
Katsina and Zamfara - remain the global epicentre of polio, with nearly
half of all global cases.
- Immunization Plus Days (IPDs) have
been credited with increases in coverage for polio vaccination. While
data for the 3rd quarter of 2006 indicates around 28% of children in the
six states with the highest polio burden have never had a dose of OPV,
this is an increase over the 40% never vaccinated as of the last quarter
of 2005. Similarly, the proportion of children who have had more than
four doses of vaccine nearly doubled in the same period. OPV was added
to the measles campaign in early October. Immunization Plus Days (IPDs)
were held 16-20 November.
- In December, the Expert Review
Committee on Polio Eradication (ERC) will scrutinize the impact of the
IPD strategy over the last months and recommend the most appropriate
schedule and type of supplementary immunization activities to rapidly
end polio transmission.
- The Sultan of Sokoto, a strong
advocate for polio eradication in Nigeria, and a polio eradication
officer from WHO/Nigeria, were among the victims of an air crash in late
October. Col Sada Maccido, younger brother of the late Sultan, has been
appointed as the new Sultan of Sokoto.
- Independently of the activities of the
Global Polio Eradication Initiative, a leading religious figure in
western Africa has been touring northern Nigeria addressing his
followers on the importance of immunization and their role in polio
eradication. Imam Cheikh Hassan Cissé of Senegal, spiritual head of a
large portion of the Muslims in the region, addressed mass gatherings of
up to 20,000 people, and met with religious and traditional leaders in
key northern states as well as with President Olusegun Obasanjo to
discuss the religious responsibility to immunize children and the safety
and effectiveness of the vaccine.
India
- The outbreak originating in
western Uttar Pradesh is on the wane in its epicentre but has spread
to the eastern part of the state and several polio-free states.
India has ten times as many cases in 2006 as in the same period last
year. India's share of the global burden of the disease has risen to
30%, in contrast with only 3% of global cases at the same time in
2005.
- While extensive, this outbreak is
the smallest of recent outbreaks – 548 cases in comparison to 1600
recorded in the 2002 outbreak – thanks to better implementation of
campaigns, increased number of staff and the use of mOPVs in the
high-risk areas. The supplementary immunization activity (SIA) of 12
November was expanded to include all districts reporting cases in
2006 and neighbouring states at highest risk, covering nearly 80% of
the country. The Union Minister of Health visited Bihar before the
12 November campaigns.
- A collaborative study by
researchers at Imperial College, London, the Entero-virus Research
Centre (Indian Council for Medical Research), the World Health
Organization and the National Polio Surveillance Project of India
released on 16 November examines the unique environmental,
sanitation and demographic factors contributing to intense
transmission of wild poliovirus in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. The
results of the study underline the appropriateness of mOPV in this
environment in order to confer immunity much faster in younger
children, including the mucosal immunity needed to interrupt
transmission.
- The India Expert Advisory Group
will meet 11-12 December to discuss and endorse new strategies for
the upcoming "low" season for polio transmission, which presents a
unique opportunity to interrupt transmission at a time when the
virus is at its most vulnerable and when large numbers of children
have been protected by the recent outbreak and vaccination
campaigns.
Afghanistan and
Pakistan
- An outbreak of polio in
Afghanistan's Southern Region (which has resulted in 29 cases in
2006) appears to be declining rapidly. Outside the Southern
Region, only one other case has been reported in 2006, in the
north eastern province of Nangarhar, which is in a corridor that
sees much travel to and from Pakistan's North West Frontier
Province (NWFP).
- A technical consultation for
Afghanistan and Pakistan's polio eradication efforts will take
place in Oman on 6-7 December.
- In Pakistan, 33 cases have
been reported this year (compared with 22 cases for the same
period in 2005) with the most intense transmission in the only
two endemic areas of North West Frontier Province (15 cases) and
Balochistan (9 cases). However, poliovirus is more
geographically and genetically restricted than ever before (15
districts compared to 18 in 2005 and 49 in 2003), indicating
progress.
Horn of
Africa
- Countries in the Horn of
Africa continue to synchronize immunization campaigns in
response to the outbreak in the region. Nomadic children of
Somali populations remain at highest risk of polio
transmission. While progress has been made in curbing the
outbreak, recent confirmation of a case in Kenya - the first
in the country in 22 years – underscores the fragility of
progress and the ongoing risk polio continues to pose to
children anywhere.
The state of polio
eradication
Global polio eradication depends on the engagement of the
leaders of the only four countries which have never stopped
polio: Nigeria, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
In addition to the endemic countries, 12 countries have
reported polio cases in 2006 due to importations (Somalia,
Yemen, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kenya, Angola,
Cameroon, Namibia, Niger, Nepal and DR Congo).
The strategies and tools
to eradicate polio are better than ever.
The programme now has vaccines which are twice as effective
and diagnostic tools that detect and track poliovirus twice
as fast as before.
The remaining challenges
to a polio-free world are:
-
Strengthening political oversight at national, state and
district level.
-
Curbing the intense transmission in the high-priority
states in northern Nigeria and western Uttar Pradesh,
India.
-
Increasing access to reach enough children with vaccine
to break the final chains of transmission.
-
Continuing to apply the rapid response strategies to
stop polio outbreaks in previously polio-free countries.
-
Addressing low routine immunization rates and
surveillance gaps in polio-free areas.
-
Maintaining funding.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Polio eradication will only
succeed with strong political commitment in polio-affected
countries and if the necessary funds are made available.
More than 10 million children will be paralysed in the next
40 years if the world fails to capitalize on its US$ 4
billion global investment in eradication. |