Polio Interrupted in Ukraine, but Efforts Must Continue

The polio outbreak in Ukraine has been declared interrupted, but significant gaps in surveillance and immunization still need to be addressed.

WHO/Shpigunov

A team of technical experts assessed Ukraine’s response to a polio outbreak and concluded that transmission of poliovirus has been interrupted. Nevertheless, the team remains concerned about significant gaps in immunization and surveillance that put Ukraine at high risk for new outbreaks.

“Thanks to the efforts of the Ministry of Health, health workers and parents, many more children are vaccinated against polio, and I commend them for their commitment,” said Dr Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO Regional Director for Europe. “But these efforts do not stop now. The immunization gap persists and, if Ukraine does not continue vaccinating its children, this gap will expand for polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases to strike.”

High routine immunization coverage

Owing to low coverage, immunization gaps accumulated in Ukraine; it interrupted polio transmission with a campaign of three rounds of catch-up vaccination. High routine immunization coverage is a top priority for WHO, to ensure that another outbreak of polio or any other vaccine-preventable disease does not hit the country.

“We need to seize the momentum gained during the polio outbreak to strengthen Ukraine’s immunization programme, so that parents may exercise their right and responsibility to vaccinate their children,” said Dr Luigi Migliorini, WHO Representative in Ukraine.

With the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), WHO is supporting the Ministry of Health in making vaccines available to close the country’s immunization gap and protect against all vaccine-preventable diseases.

Recommendations of the expert team

An expert team from different United Nations agencies and partners assessed the polio-outbreak response over two weeks in five Ukrainian regions, at both oblast and rayon levels. Experts analysed the disease surveillance systems, supplementary immunization activities, and communications “, said Dr Patrick O’Connor, leader of the WHO assessment team.

As well as concluding that poliovirus transmission in Ukraine had been interrupted, the team recommended key actions to mitigate the risk of future outbreaks:

• increase political commitment for childhood immunization;

• re-establish high, uniform immunization coverage with polio vaccines;

• improve the communication skills of frontline health workers; and

• enhance surveillance for early detection of polioviruses.

Read more here

Related


Related News

   30/04/2024
Across Afghanistan, community advocacy to increase vaccine uptake for polio and other deadly diseases has some unsung champions: the local women
   28/04/2024
New commitment will help vaccinate 370 million children against polio over five years, preventing paralysis and even death, and strengthen health systems to achieve and sustain a polio-free world.
   26/04/2024
President and First Lady meet with GPEI delegation to discuss measures to increase immunity levels
   24/04/2024
By Dr Hamid Jafari, Director, Polio Eradication, WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region
   22/04/2024
World Immunization Week highlights the importance of immunization globally