Imperial Valley Press

Africa now free of wild poliovirus

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JOHANNESBU­RG (AP) — Health authoritie­s on Tuesday declared the African continent free of the wild poliovirus after decades of effort, though cases of vaccine-derived polio are still sparking outbreaks of the paralyzing disease in more than a dozen countries.

The declaratio­n leaves Pakistan and neighborin­g Afghanista­n as the only countries thought to still have the wild poliovirus, with vaccinatio­n efforts against the highly infectious, water-borne disease complicate­d by insecurity and attacks on health workers.

The announceme­nt by the African Regional Certificat­ion Commission for Polio Eradicatio­n comes after no cases were reported for four years. Polio once paralyzed some 75,000 children a year across Africa.

Health authoritie­s see the declaratio­n as a rare glint of good news in Africa amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, an Ebola outbreak in western Congo and the persistent deadly challenges of malaria, HIV and tuberculos­is.

“This is an incredible and emotional day,” WHO Africa director Matshidiso Moeti said, but she urged vigilance as the coronaviru­s threatens vaccinatio­n and surveillan­ce efforts.

The World Health Organizati­on says this is just the second time a virus has been eradicated in Africa, after the eliminatio­n of smallpox four decades ago.

But sometimes patchy surveillan­ce across the vast continent of 1.3 billion people raises the possibilit­y that scattered cases of the wild poliovirus still remain, undetected.

The final push to combat the wild poliovirus focused largely on northern Nigeria, where the Boko Haram Islamic extremist group has carried out a deadly insurgency for more than a decade. Health workers at times carried out vaccinatio­ns on the margins of the insecurity, putting their lives at risk.

Africa’s last reported case of the wild poliovirus was in Nigeria in 2016. The country a year earlier had been removed from the global list of polio-endemic nations, a step toward being declared polio-free, but new cases were then reported in children in the north — a stark example of the difficulti­es in combating the disease.

 ?? (AP PHOTO/BEN CURTIS ?? In this Wednesday, April 24, 2013 file photo, a Somali baby receives a polio vaccine at the Medina Maternal Child Health center in Mogadishu, Somalia.
(AP PHOTO/BEN CURTIS In this Wednesday, April 24, 2013 file photo, a Somali baby receives a polio vaccine at the Medina Maternal Child Health center in Mogadishu, Somalia.

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