Nigeria may soon be taken off the list of polio endemic countries.
Nigeria
today marked one year since its last case of polio, raising hopes it will soon
be taken off the list of endemic countries as the first step to being declared
free of the disease.
The last
case was in the Sumaila district of Kano state, in the country’s north — one of
only six in 2014 and well down on the 338 recorded in 2009, according to World
Health Organization data.
Nigeria will
be removed from the WHO list of polio-endemic countries in four to six weeks if
samples sent for checking are found clear and surveillance data meets
international standards.
But health
professionals and campaigners said the fight is not over and warned about
complacency, with another two years to go before polio-free status is achieved.
“Interruption
is a major milestone. But our aim is not just interruption but eradication,”
the executive director of the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency,
Ado Muhammad, told AFP.
“We still
have two years in which we need to keep polio out,” added Oyewale Tomori,
president of the Nigerian Academy of Science, who has worked on polio
eradication for the past 45 years.
Muhammad,
Tomori and global charities Rotary International and the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation all called for both Nigeria and the international community to keep
up the momentum.
The deputy
director of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Michael Galway, said Nigeria
had made “incredible progress but the job isn’t finished”.
“Continued
leadership and domestic financing, high quality immunisation campaigns and
disease surveillance will be key” to achieving polio-free status, he added in
an emailed statement.
Nigeria and
the two other countries on the polio-endemic list, Pakistan and Afghanistan,
have all faced challenges in implementing immunisation programmes.
Immunisation
teams have been attacked and even killed while rumours were spread about the
safety of the vaccine.
But those involved
in the programme say sustained political commitment and funding, as well as
support from traditional rulers and religious leaders have helped turn around
Nigeria’s fortunes.
Emergency
operations centres improved coordination between partners while the
establishment of health camps increased access to those at risk from polio and
other childhood diseases.
Systems put
in place to tackle polio outbreaks were adapted last year to successfully
eliminate the spread of Ebola in Nigeria.
Tunji
Funsho, who heads Rotary International’s polio programme in Nigeria, said
Nigeria’s example could provide a spur for Afghanistan and Pakistan in tackling
the disease.
But Tomori
said extra attention needed to be paid to the northeast, which has been hit for
the last six years by violence from Boko Haram Islamists.
Many primary
healthcare facilities have been destroyed and hundreds of thousands of people
displaced, making immunisation of children more difficult.
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