Title: Polio Eradication Finishing the Job
1Polio EradicationFinishing the Job Protecting
our Investment
2Interrupting Poliovirus Transmission
3Wild Poliovirus, 2003data as of 27 November
Endemic Cases
Imports
4Intensified Polio Campaigns Rapid Response to
Importations
type 1 polio
type 3 polio
5Uttar Pradesh, IndiaRapid progress 2002-3
6Kano, NigeriaNeed for effective advocacy SIA
quality
7SIA Plans Quality
Planned Coverage in Country
Activities, 2004 infected areas
- India 5 NIDs 1 SNID gt85
- Pakistan 4 NIDs 2 SNIDs gt80
- Nigeria 4 NIDs 2 SNIDs 50
based on monitoring results of most recent SIAs
in 2003
8Polio-free Areas
2. establish detailed importation plans. 3.
continue NIDs/SNIDs in high risk areas.
(e.g. areas bordering Nigeria, Somalia) 4.
conduct large mop-up within 4 weeks of import.
9Close Gaps in AFP Surveillance
10Risks - Financing Interrupting Polio, US 3
billion, 1988-2005
Public Sector 65
Multilateral Sector 10
2003-5 Funding Gap US 210 million
Private Sector 25
Other includes the Governments of Australia,
Belgium, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Malaysia, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Republic of
Korea, Russian Federation, Switzerland, Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates Aventis, De
Beers, Inter-American Development Bank,
International Federation of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies, Millennium Fund, Oil for Food
Programme, OPEC Foundation, Smith Kline
Biologicals, UNICEF National Committees, UNICEF
Regular Resources United Arab Emirates Red
Crescent Society, UK National Committee/British
Airways, Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF, WHO Regular
Budget and Wyeth.
11Global Certification and Mainstreaming
12Activities to Certify Global Eradication
13Mainstreaming Priorities
- Integrate polio surveillance and lab work with
other global surveillance response systems. - Add polio to WHO/UNICEF vaccine stockpiles work.
- House longterm laboratory containment
verification processes with other biosafety
activities. - Integrate polio-funded human resources into
Country Focus and other surveillance, control
EPI initiatives.
14(No Transcript)
15Advocates for theStrategic Plan
- Ministers of Health endemic areas
- The G8 Summit
- The African Union Summit
- The Islamic Conference Summit
- Strategic Plan Launch
- January 2004
16Countdown to a Polio-free WorldSummary 2004
- India and Pakistan on track Nigeria remains
highest risk. - Intl countdown from Jan 2004 focus on each
infected area. - Intensified Polio Immunization Days
- heightened political oversight at
national/state/district. - full mobilization of civil administration
resources. - full engagement of minority populations.
- Massive mop-up within 4 weeks of any importation.
17(No Transcript)
18NWFP Sindh, PakistanVerge of Eradication - Low
or Zero Cases in High Season
19Global Certification Priorities
- Improve surveillance in 19 lagging
countries/areas 10 in Africa, 7 Eastern
Mediterranean, 2 Southeast Asia. - Maintain the laboratory surveillance network.
- Complete phase II of the Global Action Plan for
the Laboratory Containment of Wild Polioviruses. - Complete the certification process (document
verification)
20Post-Certification Activities Mainstreaming
- Total staff 3000
- Technical 1500
- gt90 work on non-polio issues (EPI, GAVI,
GFATM, etc). - 25-50 of time was in support of non-polio
activities in 2001.
21Post-Certification Activities Mainstreaming
GOAL Stop Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) as Soon as
Possible
22OPV Cessation Phase
23Post-Certification Period Priorities
- Establish strategy for OPV cessation.
- Assist countries with decisions on IPV
introduction. - License monovalent OPV for vaccine stockpiles.
- Develop Global Action Plan III for Laboratory
Containment. - Add polio to the International Health Regulations
(IHR)/ Global Outbreak Alert and Response
Network (GOARN).
24Strategic Plan Objectives
- Interrupt transmission of polioviruses.
- Achieve global certification of polio
eradication. - Establish policies tools for post-certification
era. - Mainstream the polio eradication infrastructure