World Health Summit: Global leaders pledge $2.5 billion for Polio Eradication

In News

  • Recently, Global leaders pledged $2.5 billion for polio eradication at the World Health Summit.

Key Points

  • World Health Summit:
    • It is an international health conference which was held in Berlin, Germany, from October 16-18, 2022. 
    • Leaders pledged to give about Rs 19 crore. 
  • Pledging:  
    • Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledged $1.2 billion to the largest international public health initiative, Global Polio Eradication Initiative  (GPEI). 
    • Humanitarian organization Rotary International pledged $150 million, 
    • the United States pledged 114 million, 
    • Germany over $70 million and 
    • France over $49 million.
  • Funding will help: 
    • The funding will support global efforts to overcome the final hurdles to polio eradication, 
    • Help vaccinate 370 million children annually over the next five years and 
    • Continue disease surveillance across 50 countries.
    • It would also be able to deliver additional health services and immunizations alongside polio vaccines to underserved communities
    • Full funding: The initiative needed $4.8 billion to implement its 2022-2026 strategy fully. If fully funded, the strategy can save up to $33.1 billion in health cost savings this century compared to the price of controlling outbreaks.
  • Declaration: 
    • A declaration endorsing the 2022-2026 strategy was also released by a group of more than 3,000 influential scientists, physicians, and public health experts from around the world. 
    • It called on donors to stay committed to eradication and ensure GPEI is fully funded.
    • The group points to new tactics contained in the programme’s strategy, like the continued roll-out of the novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2), that make them confident in GPEI’s ability to end polio.
      • Five hundred million doses of nOPV2 have already been administered across 23 countries and field data continued to show its promise as a tool to more sustainably stop outbreaks of type 2 circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (cVDPV).
  • Polio Virus and variants:
    • It is endemic in just two countries — Pakistan and Afghanistan. 
    • However, after just six cases were recorded in 2021, 29 cases have been recorded so far this year, including a small number of new detections in southeast Africa linked to a strain originating in Pakistan.
  • Polio cases in India:
    • India was declared polio-free in January 2014, after three years of zero cases.
    • The eradication was the result of a successful Pulse Polio campaign.
    • The last case due to wild poliovirus in the country was detected in 2011.
    • Subsequently, WHO removed India from the list of countries with active endemic wild poliovirus transmission in 2012.
    • India launched the Pulse Polio immunisation programme in 1995, after a resolution for a global initiative of polio eradication was adopted by the World Health Assembly (WHA) in 1988.
    • To further prevent the virus from coming to India, the government has since 2014 made the Oral Polio Vaccination (OPV) mandatory for those traveling between India and polio-affected countries, such as Afghanistan, Nigeria, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Syria and Cameroon.

Global Polio Eradication Initiative  (GPEI)

  • The GPEI is led by national governments with six core partners:
    • Rotary International, 
    • the World Health Organization (WHO), 
    • the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 
    • United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), 
    • the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and 
    • Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. 

Wild Poliovirus

  • About:
    • Polio is a highly infectious disease, caused by the virus which multiplies in the intestine, from where it can invade the nervous system and can cause paralysis.
    • Once that happens, the patient is crippled for life because there is no treatment for the affliction. Colloquially they are referred to as wild polio virus.
  • Variants:
    • There are three types of wild poliovirus:
      • Type 1: still exists but efforts are going on to eradicate it.
      • Type 2: eradicated.
      • Type 3: eradicated.
  • Transmission:
    • The virus is transmitted by person-to-person, mainly through the faecal-oral route or less frequently, by a common vehicle (contaminated water or food).
    • Because the virus lives in the faeces of an infected person, people infected with the disease can spread it to others when they do not wash their hands well after defecating.
  • Endemism:
    • Currently, wild poliovirus is endemic in two countries: Pakistan and Afghanistan.
    • The detection of Type 1 outside the two countries where the disease is endemic demonstrates the continuous risk of international spread of the disease until every corner of the world is free of Type 1.
  • Symptoms:
    • Minor ones:
      • Tiredness
      • Nausea
      • Headache
      • Nasal congestion
      • Sore throat, cough
      • Stiffness in the neck and back and pain in the arms and legs
    • Major one:
      • Polio infection causes permanent loss of muscle function (paralysis).
      • Polio may be fatal if the muscles used for breathing are paralysed or if there is an infection of the brain.
  • Cure:
    • Though there is no cure for the polio vaccine. However, it is preventable by a vaccine.

How a country is declared polio-free?

  • There are three variants of the poliovirus, numbered 1 to 3. For a country to be declared polio-free, the wild transmission of all three kinds has to be stopped.
  • For eradication, cases of both wild and vaccine-derived polio infection have to be reduced to zero.
  • Subsequently, WHO removes the country from the list of countries with active wild poliovirus.

Conclusion

  • The new detections of polio this year in previously polio-free countries are a stark reminder that if the goal of ending polio everywhere is not delivered, it may resurge globally.

Source: DTE

 

Other News of the Day

In News  The Embassy of Japan, New Delhi, has filed an application seeking a Geographical Indication (GI) tag for nihonshu/Japanese sake, an alcoholic beverage. This is the first time a product from Japan has filed for a tag at the Geographical Indication Registry in Chennai About Nihonshu  It is regarded as a special and valuable...
Read More

In News The Union minister for Railways recently launched India's first all-aluminium freight rail rakes. More about the news About: Hindalco has developed these all-aluminium freight rail rakes.  The aluminum rakes have been developed to: Modernise freight transportation and  Enable large carbon savings for Indian Railways. 61-wagon rakes have been flagged off from Bhubaneswar station. ...
Read More

In News  Shehan Karunatilaka has won the Booker Prize 2022 for his second novel, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida. About  The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida tells the story of a war photographer who has woken up dead in what seems to be a celestial visa office.  He has ‘seven moons’ to try and...
Read More

Context The Prime Minister distributed the PMJDY-MA Yojana Ayushman cards in Gujarat. About Gujarat combined the MA/MAV Yojana with the AB-PM-JAY scheme in 2019 and gave it the name PMJAY-MA Yojana (Mukhyamantri Amrutam (MA)). The Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY), the largest health insurance scheme in the world, was introduced by the...
Read More

Context The city of Hyderabad has bagged the prestigious 'World Green City Award 2022' beating Paris, Bogota, Mexico City, Montreal, and Fortaleza in Brazil. About Additionally, the city has also won 'Living Green for Economic Recovery and Inclusive Growth' at the International Association of Horticulture Producers (AIPH) 2022 held in Jeju, South Korea.  Hyderabad is...
Read More

In  News Vehicle-mounted ‘anti-smog guns’ have begun their rounds of Delhi, spraying water in a fine mist. What is an Anti-smog gun?  It is a device that sprays atomised water into the atmosphere to reduce air pollution.  It is connected to a water tank and mounted on a vehicle. It basically acts like rain to...
Read More

In News Recently, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs under the chairmanship of Prime Minister approved the increase in the Minimum Support Prices (MSP) for all mandated rabi crops for marketing season 2023-24. Key Points Increase in MSPs: Rs 110 per quintal (5.46 per cent) increase for the wheat crop. Other rabi crops — barley,...
Read More

In News The Indian Defence Minister recently addressed the second India-Africa Defence Dialogue (IADD). More about the dialogue About: India-Africa Defence Dialogue was held on the sidelines of DefExpo 2022 in Gandhinagar, Gujarat. Theme: The theme of the second India-Africa defence dialogue was:  “Adopting strategies for synergising and strengthening defence and security cooperation”.  Gandhinagar Declaration:...
Read More

In News The Supreme Court recently highlighted that drug abuse has gripped society and also demanded some modules that can translate as an Order to tackle the issue. More about the news Court’s take on Drug menace: Issue: According to the court's adviser in the case, it is a matter of demand and supply. It...
Read More

In News Recently, the Kerala Governor warned ministers of removal who tried to lower the dignity of his office. About the recent controversy  The Constitution does not give the Governor “dictatorial powers” to remove the ministers. There has been no occasion so far of a Governor unilaterally removing a minister from the government.  Major Issues:...
Read More

Context Recently, the Central government has pitched for Uniform Civil Code (UCC) to the Supreme Court arguing different laws as an affront to the nation's unity. About The Centre responded to petitions filed in the apex court seeking uniformity in laws governing matters of divorce, succession and inheritance and adoption and guardianship for all, irrespective...
Read More