The National - News

Fight against polio falters in Pakistan and Afghanista­n

- BEN FARMER

The global fight to stamp out polio has faltered in Pakistan and Afghanista­n and may even be going backwards, a chief of the UN’s health agency says.

Michel Zaffran, the World Health Organisati­on’s polio eradicatio­n director said the drive to wipe out the crippling disease had stagnated in the virus’s two last known haunts.

While progress continued to be made in Africa, vaccinator­s had failed to stop wild polio virus in Pakistan and Afghanista­n and cases have risen this year, Mr Zaffran told The National.

As long as the virus remained in these holdouts, there was the chance that it could spread and flare up again in countries long considered clear.

Shattered Middle East countries such as Yemen and Syria could be particular­ly vulnerable.

Yet despite the setbacks, Mr Zaffran said one strain, called Type 3 polio virus, was set to be formally declared eradicated in the next 12 months or so, after not being seen for more than six years.

By last week, there had been 29 cases of wild polio virus in the world this year – in Afghanista­n and Pakistan – compared to 22 last year.

“We are disappoint­ed and frustrated by our inability to interrupt the circulatio­n of the virus in Pakistan and Afghanista­n,” Mr Zaffran said.

“Of course we are trying to look also at the glass as half full. It’s clearly a failure on our part to not be able to interrupt the circulatio­n in the remaining endemic bloc.

“In Pakistan and Afghanista­n, it certainly is stagnation and perhaps even a step back, given we have more cases in Afghanista­n and more children are inaccessib­le than at the beginning of the year.

“In Pakistan we have been unable to stop the circulatio­n in the key reservoir, which for me is not only a stagnation, but also an indication that because we are stopping to make progress we actually are in a way going backwards.”

Worsening security in Afghanista­n is putting more children beyond the reach of vaccinator­s, but he said the problem in Pakistan, where security has improved sharply in recent years, was poor management.

“We need to do a better job, and this we haven’t done, at vaccinatin­g and protecting the children where we have access,” Mr Zaffran said. “In Pakistan, it’s not an access issue, in Pakistan it’s really a management issue.”

Pakistani officials complain they are having to tackle a migrating population drifting back and forth across the Afghan border.

A global coalition has in the past 30 years brought polio to the brink of extinction.

When the Global Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative began in 1988, the wild polio virus was present in 125 countries, with approximat­ely 1,000 children being paralysed each day. But the vast majority of the reduction to the current handful of cases took place in the early years and the final mile is proving stubbornly hard.

On the positive side, Mr Zaffran said, no wild virus has been detected in Africa for two years. There had been fears the virus still existed in parts of Nigeria under Boko Haram militant control, but as health workers had slowly gained access to the children there, they have not found the disease.

Type 3 of the virus has not been seen since 2012 said Mr Zaffran. Type 2 of the virus was declared eradicated in 2015.

“We are pretty confident now, but of course it’s not been made official, that the wild virus type 3 has been eradicated,” he said.

For all the difficulti­es, he said it was critical not to lose momentum, or to become complacent, in the final stretch of eradicatin­g polio overall.

“If we stopped our efforts now, then all that we have achieved over the last 30 years could actually be lost.”

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