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UPDATE - November 2002
En Français
This article opens a two-part series on polio. The first part assesses the progress of the eradication initiative in key countries. A second article in the next issue will examine the polio "endgame" and policies for when the world is declared free of wild poliovirus. Can polio immunization stop or should it continue indefinitely?
Polio: now or never
Poliovirus is down but not yet out. The last and toughest battles against this crippling disease are beginning now and the stakes are higher than ever
THE next few weeks are critical for the global war on polio. After 20 years of battling it out with the virus, the future will be largely determined by the outcomes of a set of house-to-house immunization campaigns taking place between now and February in India, Nigeria and Pakistan. These are the last three countries in the world where wild poliovirus is still spreading at a significant level. If the campaigns go well, the transmission of the virus could be halted worldwide in just a matter of months. If they fail, polio could start to regain its grip and the war on the virus, now so close to victory, could suffer a damaging setback.
The teams of vaccinators and their supervisors know how much is resting on their performance. "It is critical that we get it right now, and get it right in all of these places," says Dr Bruce Aylward, coordinator at WHO in Geneva of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative GPEI, a partnership spearheaded by WHO, Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control, and UNICEF. "We cannot let a phenomenal opportunity slip through our fingers."
Poliovirus has never been in such a tight corner. The number of children paralysed each year by the virus worldwide has fallen sharply - from 350,000 in 1988 to a few hundred today. The number of polio-endemic countries at the end of 2002 is lower than ever before at six, down from ten last year. And within those countries, the affected areas have shrunk, indicating that the noose around the virus's neck is tighter than at any previous time. Three of WHO's six regions - the Americas, the Western Pacific and, most recently, Europe - have already been certified free of the virus. Even countries faced with enormous logistical or political challenges, such as Bangladesh or the Democratic Republic of Congo, have had no cases of polio in 18 months. Trawl through the regularly updated case counts on the website and see the columns of zeros for country after country. "All this shows that the strategies are sound," says Aylward.
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But it is proving a tough challenge to finish the job. An outbreak of polio in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh (see Map) means that this year's case count for India alone is double last year's global total, while better surveillance and more intense transmission in the states of Kano and Kaduna in northern Nigeria have combined to increase the number of identified cases in 2002 there too.
The partners in the GPEI had aimed to stop all transmission of the virus by the end of this year but, clearly, at least some transmission will continue within the three key areas into 2003. The stated target of the global initiative is to declare the world free of polio in 2005. For this to be achieved, the Global Certification Commission set up by WHO requires that there should have been no cases of polio caused by wild virus in all six regions of the world for at least three years.
Reaching every child
Aylward says that it is still possible for all six regions to be either certified or to have started the certification process by 2005. But two key tasks must be accomplished for this to be possible. The first task is to deliver top-quality immunization campaigns now in the remaining endemic areas of India, Nigeria and Pakistan so that transmission in these countries can be stopped within months. "This is about the capacity of each country's health system to work with the community to get out and reach every child and to be held accountable for doing so." The second is to continue to reach children in another small group of countries and geographic areas where polio remains, but typically with much smaller numbers of cases. These countries or areas - principally the Kandahar area in Afghanistan, eastern Angola and the Mogadishu area of Somalia - are affected by war, civil strife or other complex emergencies. Vaccinators are hampered from doing their work by obstacles such as landmines or local militia, or because what little health system there was has simply collapsed. And vital surveillance work may also be thwarted, raising the risk that cases of polio could go unnoticed and spread.
Scaling up
At the nerve centre of the GPEI at WHO in Geneva, staff keep closely abreast of the fast-changing global situation, almost like generals monitoring a battlefield. The patterns of spread of the virus in India and Nigeria are discussed in detail and the next steps agreed. For the other countries such as Afghanistan (Box 2),where polio transmission is less frequent, every individual case is tracked and discussed and laboratory data on the genetic origins of the virus are analysed. Every effort must be made to control the spread of infection, however impassable the roads, however dangerous the conditions. This is the only way to beat the virus, by reaching every single child.
Clearly, the strategy of reaching every child cannot be achieved on the cheap or in people's spare time. Since 1994 the budget for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative for each two-year period has increased more than tenfold, from $30 million to $350 million, and the number of staff employed worldwide has grown from about 50 to more than 2500. Since 2000, house-to-house campaigns have been conducted on a huge scale in those areas where the virus remains endemic, and overall some 10 million volunteers in developing countries have been involved. The initiative is also scaling up its surveillance activities and estimates that, on top of the $450 million already pledged, it needs another $275 million before 2005.
This massive investment in people and hardware, from refrigerators to vehicles, and the zealous focus on a single disease, have proved controversial in some circles. Some commentators have welcomed the polio approach as a model for other disease control initiatives. Others have criticized it, arguing that it has drawn time and resources away from countries' broader health system needs and their routine immunization services. This ongoing debate continues elsewhere (see SPECIAL FEATURE). But most of the polio initiative's critics agree that a job that is so close to completion must now be finished properly, and as speedily as possible.
In this context, the activities of India, Nigeria and Pakistan in tackling their remaining polio endemic areas are crucial. These are the countries in which the lion's share of the staff and the resources are now at work, and the countries that hold the key to success. How have they progressed, and why should this winter's campaigns be so important? Immunization Focus talked to some of those at the sharp end in each country.
Northern Nigeria: better surveillance, more training, better supervision
1: Polio primer
- Poliovirus is highly infectious and mainly affects children aged five and younger
- It spreads via sewage and untreated water
- Poliovirus causes irreversible paralysis, sometimes within just a few hours, in about 1 in every 200 people it infects, and of these up to 10% die when their respiratory muscles stop functioning
- Polio cannot be treated; but it can be prevented with several doses of vaccine
To protect children against polio and stop the transmission of the virus, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative has four "core strategies":
- Immunization for as high as possible a percentage of infants with four doses of oral polio vaccine in the first year of life;
- Supplementary doses of oral polio vaccine to all children under age five during National Immunization Days;
- Surveillance for wild virus through reporting and laboratory testing of all cases of acute flaccid paralysis among children under fifteen years of age;
- Targeted "mop-up" campaigns once wild poliovirus transmission is limited to a specific focal area |
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The campaign in northern Nigeria starts on 9 November and Dr Abdoulie Jack, team leader for the Expanded Programme on Immunization in WHO's Abuja office, is cautiously optimistic. Based on earlier campaigns in April, May and October this year, he believes that planning and supervision are now much better, with greater coordination between the partners. "We are witnessing a gradual but definite restriction of the area of poliovirus transmission," he says. "At least half of the country has been without the virus for at least a year. "The areas where people are still becoming infected and spreading the virus to others are now restricted to a shrinking part of the north of the country around the states of Kano and Kaduna.
But within this northern area, there has been a minor epidemic, with so far 142 cases this year compared with 56 last year. Neighbouring Niger has also seen three cases. "Our surveillance network is much better than before so we are looking more closely, and this may be partly responsible for what we are seeing," says Jack. Dr Jules Pietas of the GPEI in Geneva, who works closely with the Nigerian EPI team, agrees. "There are more cases because surveillance has improved dramatically. " What is more, says Pieters, genetic analysis of the samples of poliovirus taken from the north show reduced variation between isolates. "This shows that the virus is under pressure."
Equally important, Nigeria's political leadership is now highly committed to polio eradication. "Political support is immense and has changed considerably over the past two years," says Pieters. He believes that the shift is critical because Nigeria, rather than its international partners, is taking the lead. "The international agencies can give support but it is up to the country to get the job done, and they are doing it." Dr Awosika, the national immunization programme manager, should take much of the credit, says Pieters.
Another improvement, says Jack, is that although resistance to immunization is still evident, it is less extensive than before. In recent years, there had been reports of whole communities in the north of Nigeria refusing to be immunized. "There were people who were suspicious that the vaccine was a contraceptive or that it was laced with HIV." But this year, says Jack, the vaccinating teams find only a few individual households that are still resistant. More effective advocacy explains part of this success. Also, says Jack, traditional leaders have been involved much more than before. "In the past, we did not exploit their full potential. But you cannot access communities without going through the traditional structures. This is something we have now realized and we have built it into our plans so that the traditional leaders have become an integral part of the process." In rural areas, he says, traditional leaders have helped to ensure that communities are accessible on the national immunization days, intervening where necessary to convince reluctant households to receive the vaccine. They have also helped as guides to the vaccination teams. More women have also been recruited to work in the vaccination teams - a move that has made more households willing to open the door in the first place." It's not rocket science," says Pieters. "It's common sense."
Uttar Pradesh, India: recovering from campaign `fatigue'
In a country where millions of babies are born each year, many without access to sanitation, poliovirus has plenty of places to hide out from the eradication teams. Yet much of India is now polio-free and the number of cases for the country as a whole has dropped sharply since the mid-1990s. Despite this progress, however, the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, which sits between Delhi and the border with Nepal, has a serious problem. The latest figures confirm that there have been 815 cases of polio paralysis in India this year with the vast majority in this state and, to a lesser extent, its neighbour Bihar. These figures compare with fewer than 270 cases last year in India, and fewer than 500 worldwide.
Dr Jay Wenger, Programme Manager for the Indian government's National Polio Surveillance Project in Delhi, explains why. In western Uttar Pradesh, supplementary immunization campaigns had been missing up to 15% of children under age five. Over to the centre and east of the state, meanwhile, supplementary campaigns had not been done at all, and therefore the number of un-immunized children who had been missed by routine services had grown relatively large. When polio started to spread from the West of the state earlier this year, these children quickly became infected.
Working with their Indian government colleagues, Aylward and his team in Geneva have analysed in detail the reasons for the failure to reach all children in recent campaigns in the west of the state. Once again, although resistance to immunization has been reported, this is clearly not the main problem. Rather the failure is in the delivery of the service. "The vaccinators have not been reaching enough children, and the supervisors have not always rectified the problem," says Aylward.
2: Afghanistan rebuilds its health system
Despite a shattered infrastructure, the activities of local warlords and the continued presence of US Army units hunting Al-Qaeda, Afghanistan has maintained an immunization service although routine coverage is low in some districts. Anne Golaz, regional immunization advisor for UNICEF's southern Asia office in Kathmandu, recently returned from the West of the country. "People are very willing to participate in immunization and there is a lot of support for it," says Golaz. The number of local supervisors and monitors of the immunization teams has increased and the health system is gradually improving. "These guys have achieved something incredible."
Conditions are tough for the immunization teams at any time in Afghanistan, with vast areas of roadless, mountainous terrain and remote villages. Two decades of war have wrought their own havoc. Lawlessness is still a problem in places. EPI staff cars have been sprayed with bullets and held up at gunpoint. "There is no way they are not scared, they just keep going," says Golaz.
Since March, about two million refugees have returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan, and another 300,000 have returned from Iran. Those who have been in refugee camps tend to have been immunized, but many others have been living in large cities, often with severe overcrowding and poor sanitation, and some of the infants have been missed by the immunization teams.
All known cases of polio in the country have been analysed in detail and the genetic lineages of the viruses responsible have been traced. The cases include a child of 15 months whose mother was too shy to open the door to the vaccinators and a 12-month old baby from the last and most remote village in a desert region. "The immunization coordinator said he thought the other team was doing that village; they thought he was," says Golaz. There is a case in a nomadic family who have never been immunized. There are babies who were away when the vaccinators called, because their mothers had taken them to visit other families. An immunization campaign in the valleys in December is intended to catch up with many of the mountain communities who spend the summer months in upland pastures. |
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Not at home
Children are simply being missed by the vaccinating teams. Houses have been marked as "done" when they have not been, and fully 40% of households in some districts have been marked by the vaccinators as containing no children under the age of five. This is implausible, given the age structure of the local population. "The kids are just out," says Dr Jonathan Veitch at the GPEI. In rural areas, babies and toddlers will often accompany their mothers to work in the fields, or in urban areas to their mother's workplace, leaving early and returning late.
Veitch helps coordinate the teams of "social mobilizers" - people who educate communities about the benefits of polio immunization and discuss people's worries with them. His data show that the households where parents are actually resisting polio immunization are very few. With those few that are resistant, the social mobilizers have had a remarkably high success rate, managing to convince almost half of them that immunization is in their interests.
Wenger believes that the vaccinators' performance and the quality of supervision can be improved relatively easily with some well-targeted training. Teams need to be reinvigorated and to understand the urgency, he says: for some of them, the problem is campaign "fatigue" after repeated national immunization days. But Wenger hopes that the sense of urgency has now been regained. In mid October the teams finished the first of four rounds of national immunization days; the remaining rounds will take place in November, January and February. "Our early results suggest that some of the changes that we have implemented have brought some improvement."
One key change has been to increase the size of the vaccinator teams from two to three, with the third member being a local person from the village or local area. "That person can say, `There are children in this house'," says Wenger. Also, families are more likely to be convinced of the value of polio immunization if someone that they know and respect is at the door with the strangers. As in Nigeria, the teams have increased the number of women vaccinators. And they have raised the number of supervisors to one for every three teams, rather than one for every five. Just as important, the monitoring process has been improved to give more detail on the performance of the vaccinators and to improve the consistency of data between partners. "It will take some work, but if these next couple of rounds go well, it is still possible for us to finish the job by the end of 2003," says Wenger.
Pakistan: innovation, constant review and no complacency
Pakistan's successes against polio have led some to call it a model for other countries. Since 1999, numbers of cases have fallen steadily. The latest figures for 2002 show 57 cases. The polio teams have been blitzing the regions most at risk in southern Punjab and northern Sind, as well as the cities of Karachi and Peshawar. "Peshawar has made a fantastic turnaround," says Dr Rehan Hafiz, Pakistan's EPI manager. "Until this year, we just could not get rid of the virus, but now we have not seen a polio case there for three or four months."
Dr Anthony Mounts, who works in WHO's Pakistan office, says that efforts to beat polio in Pakistan have now been focused into highly energetic, geographically limited attacks on the areas at risk. In some of these areas the teams will have done eight campaigns by the end of the year, twice as many as the rest of the country. While eight campaigns a year is clearly not sustainable for the long term, says Mounts, as a short-term approach it appears to be bearing fruit.
Hafiz believes that one of the key successes has been a decision to bring in independent local companies or agencies to monitor the campaigns and provide rapid, real-time feedback that can even alter the quality of a campaign as it goes. Gallup Pakistan, a part of the international polling company, has been one monitor, while the University of Ayubia and a social sector agency, SoSec, have also been involved. Monitoring teams go out in the week following the campaign and spot-check areas to see whether vaccinators have been there, and whether children have been missed. If any whole village or community has been missed, the monitors go straight back to the campaign coordinators' offices so that a team can be sent out immediately. All the monitoring data have to be returned within two weeks as a condition of the contract, so that prompt mopping-up action can be taken where necessary.
There are some unique challenges for Pakistan, including providing services to a large number of refugees from Afghanistan. "The refugees are very keen to receive immunization; it is simply breaking down the barriers to reach these communities that is the challenge," says Hafiz. But the challenge has not proved insurmountable. For example, in Karachi, where a large Afghan refugee population has developed, the team hired an Afghan woman to help them, and gained access to households more easily as a result.
Hafiz is not complacent. Pakistan's approach may be described as a model by others, but he is wary of the compliment. "It is not a perfect programme." But Hafiz does see light at the end of the tunnel now. "We can safely say now that, of about 120-odd districts, we have polio circulating in only about 30 of them. We are very, very hesitant to use the term `polio-free'." Hesitant, for sure, but perhaps - just perhaps - now daring to hope.
Phyllida Brown
Immunization Focus November 2002 - Contents |
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