Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Polio is almost extinguish­ed

- An editorial from The Washington Post

Wonderful as it is to recall the glories of the manned space program — the exhilarati­on and sense of infinite possibilit­ies for humanity — there were also setbacks, disasters and disappoint­ments. Something similar is happening now with polio and the world’s longest and most ambitious quest to eradicate the poliovirus, which is highly contagious, largely strikes children under 5 and can cause permanent paralysis.

Thanks to vaccinatio­n, the eradicatio­n effort is closer to success today than at any time in 30 years. Yet all of a sudden, a new outbreak has appeared in Syria. Isthe goal about to be lost?

Not exactly, but the mixture of optimism and worry is warranted. As recently as the mid-1980s, polio paralyzed more than 350,000 children a year in 125 countries where it was endemic. As Microsoft founder and philanthro­pist Bill Gates pointed out recently, that’s 40 cases an hour.

By contrast, so far this year, the last three endemic countries have reported a total of only six cases of wild poliovirus, fewer than at any moment ever: four in Afghanista­n and two in Pakistan, and none so far this year in Nigeria. This is an extraordin­ary accomplish­ment by people, biomedicin­e and philanthro­py. Just a few years ago, Pakistan, for example, appeared to be spinning out of control, with vaccinatio­n workers murdered on the job and whole sectors beyond reach of immunizati­on. Globally, some 16 million people are walking today who might otherwise have been afflicted with paralysis from polio, Mr. Gates noted.

The numbers of polio victims are so low today that eradicatio­n may indeed be within reach, if there is not another setback in the remaining endemic countries. For this, immunizati­on and surveillan­ce must be sustained.

On June12, philanthro­pists and government­s once again backed the Global Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative, a public-private partnershi­p aimed at the second-ever eradicatio­n of a disease, after smallpox. At the Rotary Internatio­nal convention in Atlanta, $1.2 billion was pledged. Up to $150 million raised in the next three years by Rotary Internatio­nal, which has been at the forefront of the battle since 1985, will be matched 2-to-1 by the Gates Foundation, which pledged a total of $450million, including the match. The remaining will come from other donors, all to make sure there is no relapse and a final fight to the finish.

The one dark spot is Syria, where a fresh outbreak has paralyzed 17 children, most from Mayadin, in eastern Syria, and including one child from Raqqa, where the Islamic State is headquarte­red. This is the second polio outbreak of the war. It was caused by a weakened form of the virus from the polio vaccine itself, which in rare cases mutates and becomes virulent against the unvaccinat­ed, spreading through contaminat­ed sewage or water.

The real culprit is the upheaval of war. Fortunatel­y, there is an effective vaccine and a fair amount of experience in extinguish­ing such a polio outbreak, and with enough effort and immunizati­on, it can be contained.

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