Monaco Reaffirms Commitment to the Polio Eradication Initiative

The Principality of Monaco has donated €170 000 to polio eradication operations worldwide, with a particular emphasis on Niger

20140325_Monaco

Monaco’s contribution comes at a critical moment because Niger remains at particular risk for polio and has been repeatedly re-infected by virus imported from neighbouring northern Nigeria. The wild poliovirus type 1 case with onset 15 November 2012 was linked to Nigeria as well as the 11 July 2013 case due to circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 (cVDPV2) which was related to cVDPV2 cases detected in 2013 in Cameroon, Chad and Nigeria.
The Government of Niger implemented a comprehensive response in line with international outbreak response guidelines issued by the World Health Assembly (WHA) in Resolution WHA59.1. Following an initial supplementary immunization activity (SIA) on 15 January 2013, 4 nationwide and 3 subnational SIAs were conducted and, a joint national and international team of epidemiologists and public health experts were deployed by the World Health Organization ‘s Regional Office for Africa to assist the Government of Niger in the investigations, help plan response activities and support active searches for additional cases of paralytic polio.

Thanks to strong routine immunization (estimated at 95%), strong disease surveillance which rapidly detects new importations and strong outbreak response activities, poliovirus has so far not managed to re-establish a foothold following re-infection. Thanks to this, Niger is not only protecting its own children, but is in fact acting as an immunity ‘firewall’, minimizing the risk of further onward spread of poliovirus to other areas of West Africa.

Related


Related News

   07/08/2024
7 August 2024
   30/07/2024
Athletes from around the world unite for a polio-free future
   31/05/2024
Countries convening at this week’s World Health Assembly discuss a range of public health topics – but why does this matter for polio?
   14/05/2024
After a thorough evaluation, an independent Polio Outbreak Response Assessment Team (OBRA), has concluded that there is no evidence of ongoing wild polio transmission in Mozambique and Malawi