The Philippines is once again polio-free, the World Health Organization said Friday, after a successful vaccination campaign that has raised hopes for COVID-19 inoculations in a country plagued by mistrust of jabs.
Polio re-emerged in the country in 2019, nearly two decades after its last cases were detected, sparking a nationwide effort to immunize millions of children against the crippling disease.
At least 17 people were infected, but health authorities said they have not detected the virus in a child or the environment in the past 16 months.
“We are celebrating freedom from polio,” said Rabindra Abeyasinghe, the WHO representative in the Philippines.
More than 80 percent of unvaccinated children were immunized in the nationwide effort, which Abeyasinghe said was “adequate to interrupt the transmission”.
The 2019 outbreak began shortly after deadly dengue fever and measles epidemics and as vaccination coverage plunged partly due to the botched rollout of a dengue shot a few years earlier.
Polio is highly infectious and can lead to paralysis and even death. There is no known cure.
The virus that re-emerged in the Philippines had genetically mutated from a weakened strain of wild polio that is contained in the oral vaccine used all over the world to control the disease.
Philippine health officials hope the success of the polio vaccination effort will be replicated in its rollout of COVID-19 jabs.
Only around 1.6 million people — or just over one percent of the population — have been fully vaccinated against the disease. The glacial pace has been blamed on supply shortages and safety fears.
“We have numerous surveys indicating that vaccine confidence is low, but this (polio) campaign has proven otherwise,” Health Undersecretary Rosario Vergeire said.
“Hopefully these kinds of activities and these kinds of efforts will be paralleled and patterned when we do our COVID-19 vaccinations and when supplies are ready.” (AFP)