WHO confirms 3rd polio case in Nigeria
Tue Sep 06, 2016 07:47:am Health
4K By Buchi Obichie
A third case of polio in Nigeria has been confirmed by the World Health Organization, WHO, Rotary Club said Monday.
According to a Rotary report, a crippled toddler found in an area newly liberated from Boko Haram militants was confirmed as the latest case.
Before the recent development, Nigeria had gone two years without recording any case of polio, and was to be certified polio-free next year.
WHO warned that more cases are expected to be discovered in these areas, stressing that "it is an indicator that Nigeria's war on polio cannot be won until it overcomes the insurgency by extremists who are violently opposed to western medicine."
The United Nations Children's Fund has warned that about one million children are in areas too dangerous to access.
Rotary is part of a new emergency immunization drive that vaccinated more than 1.5 million children last week in Borno, where WHO has said the virus has been circulating undetected for five years and where Boko Haram began its uprising in 2009.
Before the end of the year, the campaign is expected to spread across the country, with a plan to reach 25 million children.
According to a Rotary report, a crippled toddler found in an area newly liberated from Boko Haram militants was confirmed as the latest case.
Before the recent development, Nigeria had gone two years without recording any case of polio, and was to be certified polio-free next year.
WHO warned that more cases are expected to be discovered in these areas, stressing that "it is an indicator that Nigeria's war on polio cannot be won until it overcomes the insurgency by extremists who are violently opposed to western medicine."
The United Nations Children's Fund has warned that about one million children are in areas too dangerous to access.
Rotary is part of a new emergency immunization drive that vaccinated more than 1.5 million children last week in Borno, where WHO has said the virus has been circulating undetected for five years and where Boko Haram began its uprising in 2009.
Before the end of the year, the campaign is expected to spread across the country, with a plan to reach 25 million children.
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