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In
response to the polio outbreak in war-torn Syria, United Nations
officials today announced an immunization campaign aiming to reach 20
million children in seven countries over the next 6 months.
Officials
also said preliminary evidence suggests that the polio strain in Syria
is of Pakistani origin and is similar to the strains detected in sewage
in Egypt, Israel, and the Palestinian territories (the West Bank and
Gaza Strip) in the past year.
The announcement from the World
Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) called the
effort "the largest-ever consolidated immunization response in the
Middle East." It targets children in Syria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
Lebanon, Turkey, and the Palestinian territories.
Syria's polio
outbreak is the first there since 1999 and has left 10 children
paralyzed. Emergency polio immunization efforts in and around Syria have
already reached 650,000 children, including 116,000 in the "highly
contested" northeastern province of Deir-ez-Zor, where the outbreak was
confirmed last week, the WHO statement said.
It said the campaign
aims to reach 1.6 million children in Syria with vaccines against polio,
measles, mumps, and rubella. Syria's polio immunization rate has
dropped from 90% before the civil war to 68% today.
In Jordan,
more than 18,800 children under age 5 in the Za'atari refugee camp have
received polio vaccine in the past few days, and a nationwide campaign
aims to reach 3.5 million people with polio, measles, and rubella
vaccines, the WHO said. A vaccination drive has also been launched in
western Iraq, and another will start soon in the country's Kurdistan
region.
In addition, Lebanon plans to launch a nationwide
immunization campaign later this week, and efforts in Turkey and Egypt
are expected to start by mid-November, the agency said.
"The
Middle East has shown exactly the coordinated leadership needed to
combat a deadline virus: a consolidated and sustained assault on a
vaccine-preventable disease and an extraordinary commitment to a common
purpose," said Ala Alwan, MD, the WHO's regional director for the
Eastern Mediterranean, in the WHO statement.
UNICEF has acquired
1.35 billion doses of polio vaccine so far this year and will have
obtained up to 1.7 billion doses by year's end to meet increased demand,
the UN agencies said. The Syrian outbreak has increased the pressure on
a global supply that was already being stretched, they said.
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