As the globe marks World Polio day, Africa has recorded 134 new polio cases in at least seven countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced.
The regional director of the WHO for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, stated that the circulating variant of polio type 2 has been detected in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, Mali, Niger, and Nigeria.
In 2023, 541 children worldwide were impacted by polio, with 85 percent residing in 31 countries that are fragile, conflict-affected, and vulnerable, as reported by a recent UNICEF analysis on World Polio Day.
A worldwide drop in childhood immunization rates has resulted in a rise in polio outbreaks, even in nations that had been free of the disease for many years.
This situation is particularly pronounced in areas affected by conflict, with 15 out of 21 such countries—like Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, South Sudan, and Yemen—currently facing polio challenges.
Recently, UNICEF and its partners have ramped up emergency measures to address the increase in polio cases.
In Gaza, for instance, UNICEF, in collaboration with WHO, managed to vaccinate nearly 600,000 children under the age of 10 during the initial phase of a polio vaccination drive in mid-September.
The second and final phase has been carried out successfully in southern and central Gaza, although ongoing mass displacements and bombings have hindered efforts in the northern region.
This campaign marks the return of polio to Gaza after a 25-year absence.
In Sudan, the national childhood vaccination rate has plummeted from 85% prior to the conflict to just 53% in 2023, with active conflict zones seeing coverage drop to a mere 30%.
In response, UNICEF and its partners have conducted two emergency polio vaccination campaigns in recent months, successfully reaching 2.9 million children under five through door-to-door efforts.
Effective polio vaccination initiatives in fragile, conflict-affected, and vulnerable regions are vital for preventing further cases and safeguarding already at-risk children.
Humanitarian pauses are crucial to allow healthcare workers to safely access children and administer vaccines.