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Global Polio Eradication Initiative: Challenges and Opportunities

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Title: Global Polio Eradication Initiative: Challenges and Opportunities


1
Global Polio Eradication InitiativeChallenges
and Opportunities
2
Polio Eradication on the African Continent
Summary points
  • Polio continues to spread in West and Central
    Africa where vaccination coverage is
    insufficient, and continues to circulate in Egypt
    despite increasing numbers of campaigns causing
    risks to polio eradication
  • National immunization days are not achieving the
    quality necessary to protect sufficient numbers
    of children to stop polio transmission
  • Surveillance of acute flaccid paralysis not
    detecting all cases
  • Additional risks to completing polio eradication
    during 2005
  • Failing to contain the spread of polio virus from
    its reservoir in Nigeria/Niger
  • Failing to re-start immunization activities in
    Côte d'Ivoire
  • Perception of insufficient government commitment
    or failure to progress by donors, leading to
    decreased resources

3
African Union Heads of State SummitAbuja, 30-31
January 2005
  • Convened by President Obasanjo
  • Two hour agenda item on health AIDS,TB,
    malaria and polio
  • Polio partners proposing communiqué on polio

  • Opportunity to increase commitment and funding of
    G8, OIC, OECD and national governments

October launch, synchronized National immunizatio
n days,
West and Central Africa
4
Increasing Country-level commitment and
effectiveness
  • Public health system alone is insufficient to
    provide logistics and staffing necessary for
    reaching every child with polio vaccine
  • Commitment from health and other necessary
    government sectors can be increased
  • Country-level advocacy meetings bringing all
    national partners together with minister or other
    high level officials
  • Regularly informing head of state and ministry of
    foreign affairs on polio situation through
    monthly reports in cabinet

5
Independent monitoring of vaccination campaigns
and surveillance activities
  • Polio virus will not disappear as rapidly as
    vaccination coverage increases
  • Surrogate information that will demonstrate
    effective eradication activities
  • Surveillance for acute flaccid paralysis that
    meets international standards including
    timeliness of laboratory analysis and reporting
  • Independent monitoring data that demonstrate
    actual numbers of children vaccinated/missed in
    addition to vaccine tally sheets
  • National commitment as demonstrated by government
    officials launching campaigns, and by television
    spots and media coverage

6
Example NID Monitoring Data children und un-immunized
Oct 2004
Nov 2004
NOTE 41,000 children checked
7
Local Resource Mobilization
  • Increasing funds required in 2004 and 2005
    because of spread of polio virus to countries
    with low polio vaccination coverage
  • Local resource mobilization for polio compliments
    funding from WHO and UNICEF in many African
    countries where
  • Government commitment is demonstrated by national
    budget allocations for polio have facilitated
    bilateral fund-raising
  • UN Consolidated Appeal Process (CAP) is
    applicable for emergency polio funding in 2005
    Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire are
    eligible
  • UNICEF, Rotary and WHO can provide support
    through ICC and other national mechanisms

8
THE CHALLENGE FOR 2004
  • Increase the quality of vaccination campaigns
    and strengthen surveillance for acute flaccid
    paralysis, interrupting transmission of wild
    polio virus while maintaining donor confidence
    and the necessary resource-base.

9
Opportunities in polio eradication 2005
  • African Union heads of state meeting and
    communiqué to further commit national
    governments, G8, OIC, OECD, others
  • Increasing country level commitment and
    effectiveness through advocacy meetings and
    regular head of state briefing
  • Independent monitoring of vaccination campaigns
    and surveillance to increase effectiveness and
    donor confidence
  • Local resource mobilization to maximize funding
    for polio eradication activities

10
African Ministers of Health Meeting on Polio
Eradication, 13 January 2005
  • We, the Ministers of Health of the 8 most
    severely polio-affected countries of Africa,
    supported by the polio partners, resolve to
    further intensify eradication activities, with
    the goal of stopping polio in 2005 by
  • conducting at least 5 rounds of synchronized
    polio campaigns,
  • mobilizing the full resources of government
    local communities to ensure there are sufficient
    people transport to reach every child in each
    campaign.
  • restarting sustaining polio campaigns in all
    polio-infected high risk areas.
  • personally monitoring the quality of each
    campaign and of surveillance.
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