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Polio: where we are now

The annotated guide to ending polio

By Illustrations by

As the number of polio cases approaches zero, the challenges facing Rotary and its partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative are changing. We still need to reach every child with the polio vaccine – and we’re using innovative strategies to do that, in spite of geopolitical uncertainties.

But that’s only one part of our job.

We’re tackling vaccine-derived poliovirus, which can begin to spread in places where vaccine coverage is low. We’re becoming disease detectives, following up on any shred of evidence that wild poliovirus might still be circulating. And we’re fine-tuning our plan to keep the world free of polio forever.

Here’s what you need to know about where we are now.

Polio is an intestinal virus that is spread through contact with the feces of an infected person, which can contaminate water or food.

 

  1. The virus latches onto a receptor on the surface of a cell, multiplying in the lining of the intestines.

  2. It enters the cell and hijacks the cell’s own machinery to make copies of itself.

  3. The virus is released to infect neighboring cells, spreading from the digestive tract to lymph nodes and the bloodstream.

  4. The virus replicates and is excreted through feces, starting the cycle again.

Rotary and its partners worked to reach 430 million children in 39 countries during polio immunization campaigns in 2017.

Afghanistan

Angola

Benin 

Cameroun

Central African Republic 

Chad

Côte d’Ivoire

Democratic Republic of Congo

Djibouti 

Equatorial Guinea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

India

Indonesia 

Iraq

Kenya

Laos

Liberia

Libya

Madagascar

Mali 

Mauritania

Mozambique

Myanmar 

Nepal

Niger

Nigeria 

Pakistan

Republic of the Congo

Sierra Leone

Somalia

South Sudan

Sudan

Syria 

Tajikistan

Uganda

Yemen

We’re also fighting vaccine-derived poliovirus.

 

  • The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) uses the oral polio vaccine in immunization campaigns. It’s made from strains of the poliovirus that are live, but weakened.

    This weakened virus multiplies in a child’s gut, stimulating an immune response in the lining of the intestines. Then the child excretes the vaccine-virus in his or her feces.

  • That is usually a good thing: Other children are then exposed to the weakened vaccine-virus in the environment. This exposure stimulates their bodies to create the protective antibodies as well. It’s a way to indirectly induce immunity in children who may not have been reached by health workers with doses of the vaccine.

  • In places with low immunization rates, the weakened vaccine-virus can begin to circulate. In rare cases, it mutates back into a more virulent strain that can cause paralysis. This is called vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV).

    In 2016, the year after the world was certified free of type 2 polio, all countries switched from a trivalent vaccine, which immunized against all three strains, to a bivalent vaccine, which immunizes only against types 1 and 3.

  • Since the switch, there have been outbreaks of circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV) from the type 2 strain in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, Somalia, and Syria. The GPEI has a stockpile of monovalent type 2 vaccine to use to stop these outbreaks.

  • High immunization rates are the best protection against both wild and vaccine-derived polioviruses.

    Many countries use inactivated polio vaccine, which uses a dead virus, in their routine immunization systems to avoid the risk of VDPVs. Inactivated polio vaccine protects only the individual who received the vaccine against polio infection.  

    Oral polio vaccine is the only vaccine that can interrupt the person-to-person transmission of wild poliovirus, which is why it will be used until the world is certified polio-free. Once wild poliovirus types 1 and 3 have been eradicated, only inactivated polio vaccine will be used.

We search out the poliovirus wherever it hides.

Scientists look for evidence of the poliovirus in the environment to learn more about how it is circulating...

  • Most children infected with the poliovirus don’t show symptoms, but they still excrete the virus in their feces for several weeks.

  • Workers collect water samples near sewage treatment plants or, in areas without adequate sanitation, other known sources of wastewater such as open canals and streams.

  • Samples are kept cold during transportation to a lab that is part of the Global Polio Laboratory Network.

  • Virologists test the samples for poliovirus.

    If virologists confirm the presence of a poliovirus, they carry out further tests to determine the exact genetic makeup of the virus and whether it is wild or vaccine-derived.

  • ...and health workers track the children who show symptoms to see if they are caused by the poliovirus.

    A child under age 15 experiences sudden, unexplained weakness or paralysis, known as acute flaccid paralysis (AFP). Most cases of paralysis are not caused by polio, but we investigate them to be certain.

    A doctor or other community member such as a traditional healer, pharmacist, or cleric reports the case to medical authorities.

     

  • Doctors collect a stool sample within 48 hours of the onset of paralysis, and another one 24 to 48 hours later.

  • The scientists compare it against reference samples of known polioviruses. Because viruses from different regions have slightly different genetic sequences, the virologists can map where the virus came from – whether it was local or came across a border or from farther away.

  • Health workers use this information to figure out the best immunization strategy to prevent further spread.

  • 1 in 200 polio infections leads to irreversible paralysis.

The scientists who identify the virus work in one of the 146 labs accredited by the World Health Organization, in 92 countries, that make up the Global Polio Laboratory Network.

  • 123 subnational and national laboratories are the front-line facilities that test stool and sewage samples

  • 17 regional reference laboratories distinguish between wild and vaccine-derived poliovirus and determine the genetic makeup of the virus

  • 6 global specialized laboratories determine the genetic makeup of the virus, and prepare and distribute the chemicals used in virus testing

  • 17.4 million people who are currently healthy would have been paralyzed by polio without our eradication efforts since 1988

  • In 30 years, we’ve gone from 125 polio-endemic countries to 3

The Rotary Foundation awarded nearly $700 million in PolioPlus grants from 2010 to 2017. Vaccines are largely covered by other donors, so Rotary provides funds to cover the gaps.

  • $308 million: Operational support including stipends for the millions of community-based vaccinators who administer the vaccine and perform house-to-house follow-up visits 

  • $132 million: Technical assistance including salaries for health and immunization professionals such as field officers and cold chain managers 

  • $141.4 million: Social mobilization to raise awareness of the vaccination campaigns and the benefits of immunization 

  • $72.5 million: Surveillance for disease detection, including the Polio Laboratory Network 

  • $20.4 million: Vaccines 

  • $16.6 million: Research into new ways to facilitate eradication 

And we have a plan for keeping the world polio-free forever.

Interruption 

  • Detect the last wild poliovirus in an individual or the environment. 
  • Continue immunizations, surveillance, and responses to outbreaks of vaccine-derived poliovirus. 
  • Begin to transition the resources that the GPEI created to support other health priorities.

Certification

  • Certify the world polio-free.
  • Dissolve the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.
  • Reduce the number of laboratories and vaccine-manufacturing facilities that store the poliovirus and ensure stringent safeguards for those that continue to handle the virus.
  • Hold high-quality immunization campaigns to create a firewall of immunity in advance of the withdrawal of the oral polio vaccine.

 

Transition

  • Stop using oral polio vaccine concurrently in all countries to eliminate the risk of vaccine-derived poliovirus and begin to immunize children using only the inactivated polio vaccine in routine immunizations. 
  • Continue surveillance; after the world is polio-free, environmental surveillance will be increasingly relied on.
  • Respond to outbreaks of vaccine-derived poliovirus, which could circulate for several years after ending the use of oral polio vaccine.

Join us for World Polio Day on 24 October. Hold a VR event in your community or catch the livestream.