Recent successes in India’s relentless effort to
eradicate polio are raising hopes that the goal is in sight. The
incidence of the disease is at a record low, with only one case reported
in 2011, as of 1 March, and just 42 in all of 2010. That compares with
741 cases the year before.
By Dan Nixon
Rotary International News -- 15 March 2011
Rotarians from several countries joined their counterparts in India to promote and participate in the 23 January NID. Photo courtesy of India PolioPlus Committee
Recent successes in India’s relentless effort to
eradicate polio are raising hopes that the goal is in sight. The
incidence of the disease is at a record low, with only one case reported
in 2011, as of 1 March, and just 42 in all of 2010. That compares with
741 cases the year before.
A major factor is the widespread use of the bivalent oral polio
vaccine, which is effective against both types of the poliovirus.
Another is rigorous monitoring, which helped reduce the number of
children missed during National Immunization Days (NIDs) to less than 1
percent in 2010, compared with 14 percent in 2009, according to the
World Health Organization.
During NIDs in January and February, Rotarians helped immunize
children; organize free health camps and polio awareness rallies; and
distribute banners, caps, face masks, comic books, and other items to
children. Sporting signature yellow vests and caps, the volunteers
fanned out to sites including schools, train stations, and bus depots
across the country.
Teams of visiting Rotarians from Hong Kong, Italy, Korea, the
Netherlands, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom also took part in
activities related to the 23 January NID, which immunized 174 million
children.
In Veraval, Gujarat, a city of about 340,000 people, Rotarians and
others worked at more than 100 immunization booths. “The town clearly
bought into the whole project, and kids were flowing into the booths for
immunizations,” reports a Group Study Exchange team from District 9980
(New Zealand).
In Murshidabad, the highest-risk area for polio in West Bengal,
Rotarian and non-Rotarian doctors organized health camps to screen and
treat children for other illnesses and immunize them against the
crippling disease. Had it not been for the camps, “many of those
children may have remained unvaccinated,” says Jenny Horton, a nurse,
veteran Rotary volunteer, and member of the Rotary Club of Kenmore,
Queensland, Australia.
Rotarians in India “have learned to take the battle against polio
to every nook and corner,” says Rotary Foundation Trustee Ashok Mahajan.
“It is time to step on the eradication accelerator.”
Says Deepak Kapur, chair of the India PolioPlus Committee: “What we
have achieved in the country through the PolioPlus program is historic
and, despite some last-minute difficulties, the goal of eradicating the
disease is within reach. We now need to strengthen and focus our
strategy ... in endemic regions to finish off this final battle toward a
polio-free India.”
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