Three Cases Confirmed in Ivory Coast |
Sept. 19, 2019, The New York Times
The
Philippines on Thursday announced an outbreak of polio, 19 years after
the World Health Organization declared the Southeast Asian country free
of the infectious disease.
Health
Secretary Francisco Duque said government scientists have confirmed the
“re-emergence of polio” after one case in the southern province of Lanao
del Sur and another suspected case of the disease. He blamed “poor
immunization coverage,” a lack of sanitation and proper hygiene and poor
surveillance by health workers as among the reasons the disease
returned.
Polio is an infectious
disease that can spread rapidly and mainly affects young children. It
can cause muscle weakness, paralysis and, on rare occasions, it can be
fatal. There is no cure for polio, but it can be prevented with multiple
doses of polio vaccines.
Despite
aggressive eradication efforts around the world, the disease has hung on
in a handful of countries and even gained a stronger foothold in some,
like Pakistan and Afghanistan. There are currently cases this year in several African countries, such as the Central African Republic and Somalia.
Mr.
Duque said on Thursday that the case in Lanao del Sur involved a
3-year-old girl. Apart from that confirmed case, a case of “acute
flaccid paralysis” thought to also be polio was awaiting confirmation,
he said.
He also announced that the
government would be embarking on a new polio vaccination campaign with
the help of the W.H.O. “We strongly urge parents, health workers and
local governments to fully participate in the synchronized polio
vaccination,” Mr. Duque said, adding that vaccination was the only way
“to stop the polio outbreak and to protect your child against this
paralyzing disease.”
“Aside from
immunization,” he said, “we remind the public to practice good personal
hygiene, wash their hands regularly, use toilets, drink safe water, and
cook food thoroughly.”
Government
scientists have also detected the polio virus in samples taken from
sewage in Manila and waterways in the southern city of Davao, Mr. Duque
said. Those results, he said, were confirmed by the Research Institute
for Tropical Medicine in Manila, the Japanese National Institute for
Infectious Diseases and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
in the United States.
“A single
confirmed polio case of vaccine-derived polio virus type 2 or two
positive environmental samples that are genetically linked isolated in
two different locations is considered an epidemic in a polio-free
country,” Mr. Duque said.
The
W.H.O. and UNICEF will be working with the health department on a
“rapid response” to curb the outbreak. It will include a series of oral
polio vaccinations to protect every child under the age of 5 years in
areas at risk, beginning next month.
Dr.
Rabindra Abeyasinghe, the W.H.O.’s representative in the country, urged
all parents to have their children vaccinated to protect against the
disease.
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