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Afghanistan Report
Fighting a stubborn polio virus
Despite efforts to eliminate
polio in Afghanistan since
1980, the disease is still prevalent:
at least 10 children have
caught the virus in the past six
months, according to health
officials.
Immunization coverage has
increased in the past seven
years from 32% in 2001 to over
80% in 2007, according to UN
World Health Organization
(WHO) statistics, and no polio
case was reported in northern
and central parts of the
country in 2008, prompting
the Health Ministry and WHO
to say the poliovirus had been
restricted to only a few
conflict-affected provinces in
the south and southeast.
However, there has been a
recent confirmed case in the
northern province of Kapisa,
and nine other cases have been
reported in the southern
provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, and in Nooristan (in
the east).
In 2008 WHO reported 31
polio cases in Afghanistan.
The immunization of over
seven million under-five children
requires about US$18
million a year, most of which
comes from international
donors.
Access problematical
Access to children in insecure
areas has long been a major
obstacle for polio immunization
drives. Health workers
have often been attacked,
harassed and kidnapped by
insurgents or criminals,
according to media reports.
Only 13% of children in the
southern provinces routinely
received oral poliovirus
vaccine compared to 47% in
the southeast, 66% in the east and 69% in central areas,
according to a WHO weekly
epidemiological record in
March 2009.
About 200,000 children miss
out on polio drops every time
the vaccinators conduct a
nationwide immunization
drive, it said.
“Three things impede polio
immunization in Helmand
Province: first the insecurity,
second a lack of public awareness,
and very low payments to
vaccinators,” said Jan Agha, a
local health worker.
“The Taliban often oppose
vaccinations. They threaten
and beat vaccinators and break
their vaccination kits… so
people don’t want to risk their
lives for 150 Afghanis [US$3] a
day,” said a vaccinator in Kandahar Province who
declined to be named.
Also, the return of Afghan
refugees from Pakistan and
unregulated cross border movements
between the two countries
have contributed to the
movement of the poliovirus,
health officials say.
Ambitious goal
Poliovirus is endemic in four
countries in the world:
Afghanistan, Pakistan, India
and Nigeria.
But the Afghan government
has an ambitious goal: “We aim
to eradicate polio by the end of
2010,” Aqa Gul Dost, head of
the Health Ministry’s immunization
department, told
IRIN.
“Technically it’s very possible to finish the job in this
period if vaccinators have
access to every child for 5-6
rounds of immunization,” said Tahir Pervaiz Mir, WHO’s
polio medical officer in Kabul.
“We call on all warring
parties to allow access to children
and also call on parents to
immunize their children,” said
Dost.
Date
of upload: 30th Sep 2009
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