No new polio cases in Syria reported for a year: WHO
We were consistently reaching 85 percent of kids or more in Syria in the last 12 months says WHO's polio manager
BEIRUT:
Despite vast areas of Syria not under government control, and some areas being bombed by the US, the past year saw no reported polio case in the war-torn country, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.
The feat was achieved after a massive immunisation campaign triggered by the disease's appearance in Syria.
The agency said "the outbreak seems to have been brought under control" in Syria after a push to immunise millions of children across the Middle East.
"It's a very encouraging sign that Syria's returning to a polio-free status," Chris Maher, the WHO's polio eradication manager, told AFP.
He said the landmark did not guarantee that Syria was polio-free, but it did suggest that the mass immunisation had been successful.
The WHO confirmed a polio outbreak in Syria in late 2013, reporting at least 10 cases of the disease in children hit with acute flaccid paralysis.
The announcement triggered global concern and prompted an inter-agency, international effort to vaccinate millions of children across the Middle East.
To date, 27 million children have been immunised in eight countries -- Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Iran and the Palestinian territories, the WHO said.
Maher said between 2.7 and three million children in Syria had been immunised during the campaign in areas under rebel, government, and militant control.
"We were consistently reaching 85 percent of kids or more in Syria in the last 12 months," he said.
The appearance of the disease in Syria, which had been polio-free since 1999, was blamed on the breakdown of the country's health infrastructure and vaccination programmes.
The WHO said the specific strain of the disease originated in Pakistan, though it declined to comment on speculation that foreign fighters arriving in the warzone could have brought polio with them.
Polio has also affected Iraq, where immunisation efforts have been impeded in some places by fighting.
"But the proportion of children unreached by immunisation has been relatively low," Maher said, and no new polio cases have been reported in Iraq since April.
Maher said countries are usually deemed polio-free if no new cases are reported for six months, but the agency remained "cautious" in the cases of Syria and Iraq.
"In the setting of the Middle East, because of the fighting, the displacement of populations and all of those things, we weren't that bullish," he said.
"We're trying not to be complacent about it at all and we're keeping our guard up," he added, saying further immunisation rounds were planned for 2015.
Despite vast areas of Syria not under government control, and some areas being bombed by the US, the past year saw no reported polio case in the war-torn country, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.
The feat was achieved after a massive immunisation campaign triggered by the disease's appearance in Syria.
The agency said "the outbreak seems to have been brought under control" in Syria after a push to immunise millions of children across the Middle East.
"It's a very encouraging sign that Syria's returning to a polio-free status," Chris Maher, the WHO's polio eradication manager, told AFP.
He said the landmark did not guarantee that Syria was polio-free, but it did suggest that the mass immunisation had been successful.
The WHO confirmed a polio outbreak in Syria in late 2013, reporting at least 10 cases of the disease in children hit with acute flaccid paralysis.
The announcement triggered global concern and prompted an inter-agency, international effort to vaccinate millions of children across the Middle East.
To date, 27 million children have been immunised in eight countries -- Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Iran and the Palestinian territories, the WHO said.
Maher said between 2.7 and three million children in Syria had been immunised during the campaign in areas under rebel, government, and militant control.
"We were consistently reaching 85 percent of kids or more in Syria in the last 12 months," he said.
The appearance of the disease in Syria, which had been polio-free since 1999, was blamed on the breakdown of the country's health infrastructure and vaccination programmes.
The WHO said the specific strain of the disease originated in Pakistan, though it declined to comment on speculation that foreign fighters arriving in the warzone could have brought polio with them.
Polio has also affected Iraq, where immunisation efforts have been impeded in some places by fighting.
"But the proportion of children unreached by immunisation has been relatively low," Maher said, and no new polio cases have been reported in Iraq since April.
Maher said countries are usually deemed polio-free if no new cases are reported for six months, but the agency remained "cautious" in the cases of Syria and Iraq.
"In the setting of the Middle East, because of the fighting, the displacement of populations and all of those things, we weren't that bullish," he said.
"We're trying not to be complacent about it at all and we're keeping our guard up," he added, saying further immunisation rounds were planned for 2015.