The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Donors pledge $2.6B for polio eradicatio­n

- KATE KELLAND REUTERS

LONDON — Donor government­s and philanthro­pists pledged $2.6 billion Tuesday to help fund a worldwide polio eradicatio­n plan that has taken decades to reach what global health specialist­s say is now the “last mile”.

The funding — almost of half of which came in a single donation from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation — will be used to immunize 450 million children against polio each year, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said in a statement.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said that by seeking to reach “every last child” with vaccines against the crippling viral disease, the Global Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative (GPEI) is coming ever closer to achieving a polio-free world.

The WHO last month announced an “historic step” in the fight to wipe out polio, certifying that the second of the three types of the polio virus had been eradicated globally.

Global polio cases have been cut by more than 99 per cent since 1988, but the Type 1 polio virus is still endemic in Pakistan and Afghanista­n, where it has infected 102 people this year. That is a resurgence from a record low global annual figure of 22 cases in 2017.

Polio invades the nervous system and can cause irreversib­le paralysis within hours. It cannot be cured, but it can be prevented by vaccinatio­n — and a dramatic reduction in cases worldwide in recent decades has been due to intense national and regional immunizati­on campaigns for babies and children.

The $2.6-billion pledge will part fund the GPEI’s 2019-2023 “endgame strategy”. A total of $3.27 billion is needed to fully implement the plan, the WHO said.

Donors made their pledges at a “Reaching the Last Mile” polio conference in Abu Dhabi.

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