The WHO and UNICEF on Friday, applauded the Philippines for ending the polio outbreak almost two years after the highly infectious disease re-emerged in the country.
In a joint statement, the UN agencies said the Philippines’ Department of Health (DOH) officially stopped the polio outbreak response on June 3.
“The decision came as the virus has not been detected in a child or the environment in the past 16 months,” the statement said.
The agencies said comprehensive outbreak response actions, including intensified immunisation and surveillance activities in affected areas of the Southeast Asian country, curbed the spread of the poliovirus.
The DOH announced a polio outbreak in the Philippines on Sept. 19, 2019, after 19 years of a polio-free status.
Since then, the Philippine government and the WHO, the UNICEF, and other partners mounted nationwide polio campaigns to stop the spread of the virus.
Despite the tremendous challenges to immunisation presented by the simultaneous impact of coronavirus (COVID-19) the DOH had continued robust polio immunisation campaigns.
In particular, the UNICEF and WHO lauded the DOH for enhancing training and mobilising health workers in infection prevention and control.
They also praised the DOH for supplying the health workers with personal protective equipment to enable vaccinating children in their homes and designated health centres.
“The WHO also supported the country’s polio outbreak response by providing technical and operations support on intensifying polio surveillance; planning; preparing for and monitoring immunisation campaigns; infection prevention and control measures and risk communication.
“It also deployed international and national polio experts who provided on-the-ground technical support to the affected regions and local implementers.
“This is a major win for public health and is an excellent example of what collective efforts can attain, even in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Rabindra Abeyasinghe, WHO representative to the Philippines said.
UNICEF supported DOH through vaccine procurement and delivery, development of immunisation guidelines, social mobilisation, engaging community members and influencers and building the capacity of DOH and local government units nationwide to ensure that all children were inoculated.
“The success of the polio immunisation in the Philippines is proof that when we come together for children, great things happen,” UNICEF Representative to the Philippines, Oyunsaikhan Dendevnorov, said.
Polio is a highly infectious, crippling and sometimes fatal disease that can be avoided with a vaccine.
Children under the age of five are particularly vulnerable.
The WHO said the disease remained endemic in Afghanistan and Pakistan and polio would be the second disease ever to be completely eradicated when eradicated there.
Xinhua