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PAKISTAN: Over 34 million children vaccinated against polio

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PAKISTAN: Over 34 million children vaccinated against polio
08 May 2007

ISLAMABAD, 8 May 2007 (IRIN) - More than 34 million children in Pakistan were successfully immunised against polio during last week's national vaccination round, health officials have said.

"We had nearly 98 percent coverage - a first in Pakistan," Dr Javed Iqbal, national polio campaign coordinator for the World Health Organization (WHO), said on Tuesday in Quetta, provincial capital of Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province.

"We're now on the right track. It's the final mile of the marathon," Iqbal added.

His comments come one week after the launch of the three-day national polio immunisation drive, the second this year, in an effort to eradicate the debilitating disease that mainly strikes children.

The WHO national campaign cell reported nationwide coverage of 97.7 percent, with 34.1 million children under the age of five successfully vaccinated, a result praised by UNICEF, one of three partners involved in the immunisation effort, along with WHO and the Pakistani government.

"During each polio campaign, we strive for high quality campaigns which reach all children under five years of age," Melissa Corkum, a spokeswoman for UNICEF's polio eradication efforts remarked, describing campaigns reaching more than 95 percent of the children under the age of five as "high quality".

"The result achieved during the April campaign was strong," Corkum said, stressing, however, that the key now was ensuring that all districts and local governments achieved this target on a consistent basis.

North West Frontier Province

But despite, the positive assessment there remained operational challenges in a few key areas, she said, particularly in Pakistan's North West Front Province (NWFP).

"The main challenge is reaching populations to whom access is hampered, either due to population movements, or due to areas of insecurity, or due to cultural conservatism in some tribal areas," the UNICEF official said.

However, according to a report by the NWFP health department, about 97 percent was also achieved in the province and the country's federally-administered tribal areas, where 5.6 million children had been targeted.

Full eradication

But before full eradication can be declared, Pakistan must stop the virus's transmission in its tracks, as an area cannot be declared polio-free until one year without a case of polio.

Although there were many areas of the country that have not had any cases for significant periods of time - including Pakistani-administered Kashmir, the capital, Islamabad, as well as the country's populous Punjab province, which has not reported a case since July 2006 - much work remains.

"The majority of the cases are from a limited number of districts," Corkum said, noting the campaign would continue until no more polio cases were reported from any part of the country for three consecutive years.

"That means that even if we stop the transmission of the wild poliovirus in 2007, campaigns will continue until 2010," she clarified.

According to WHO, the world's success in eradicating polio depends on four countries where the virus remains endemic - India, Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In 2006, there were 40 confirmed cases of polio in Pakistan and 31 in Afghanistan. This year, there have been no reported cases of polio in Afghanistan but seven in Pakistan. Of these, three were in the country's southwestern Sindh province, two were in NWFP and two in Balochistan.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/fe1f916eff0b12b1808f058fc153919a.htm
 
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Best thing that happen for south asia is the eradication of such diseases totally. Its much more important than Kashmir or Sikkim or anything else.
 
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I agree, we've already eradicated Malaria and polio from most of the region.
Health and education for all!
 
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