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Southeast Asia Free Of Polio As India Declares Health Victory

Eight-year-old Manish, who caught polio years ago, learns to walk with leg braces at a rehabilitation center in New Delhi on Thursday.
Manish Swarup
/
AP
Eight-year-old Manish, who caught polio years ago, learns to walk with leg braces at a rehabilitation center in New Delhi on Thursday.

A watershed moment occurred in global health Thursday: The World Health Organization said that its Southeast Asian region is now officially polio-free.

The milestone means that 80 percent of the world's population now lives without fear of the paralyzing disease.

Although India reported its last polio case three years ago, vaccination campaigns continue across the country.
Narinder Nanu / AFP/Getty Images
/
AFP/Getty Images
Although India reported its last polio case three years ago, vaccination campaigns continue across the country.

The certification came on the heels of India's successful fight against the disease. The huge nation hasn't reported a case of the wild polio virus in three years. Not long ago, India had more cases of polio than any other country in the world.

Questions still remain, though, about how India will stay free of polio and whether the country can apply the strategies against polio to other preventable diseases.

India's polio-free status is the culmination of a grueling battle that sent millions of health workers down alleys, up mountains and across deserts to reach every child in India during the course of the last 19 years.

But for many young men and women now in their 20s, the country's achievement comes too late. India's suffering at the hands of polio is still readily apparent in the reconstructive surgery ward of St. Stephen's Hospital in Delhi.

Mushtareen Khan lies in the women's ward. She caught polio two decades ago when she was 10 months old and recalls what it felt like to grow up with no use of her legs. "Everyone can walk and go, and I'm not able to," she says.

Khan came to this hospital crawling, unable to even stand up, says Dr. Mathew Varghese, who has operated on thousands of polio patients. "She has both her hips and both her knees severely deformed," he says.

In the hope of being able to walk, Khan has already undergone four surgeries on her legs, and will need two more before they are completely straightened.

"She's almost there," Varghese says. "Another maybe two, three weeks, she'll be straight."

Khan's mother seems to overflow with happiness at her daughter's prognosis — which, Varghese points out, will make the young woman more eligible to be married.

Down the road from St. Stephen's Hospital, a ceremony unfolded at the WHO headquarters that thrilled the doctor. Health care workers who had toiled to end polio were lauded while medallions were handed out to members of an independent panel that reviewed evidence that showed 11 countries in Southeast Asia, including India, have eradicated polio.

But the battle against the virus is far from over. While reported cases have declined in Afghanistan and Nigeria, Pakistan, India's neighbor, now has the highest number of cases in the world.

Despite the progress in India and South Asia, WHO's Assistant Director General for Polio and Emergencies, Dr. Bruce Aylward, says there can be no respite if the goal of global eradication of polio is to be achieved by 2018.

"Now the big danger is switched to another virus, called complacency," Aylward says. "And it's as hard to get rid of, sometimes, as the polio virus was. So the challenge, then, is maintaining coverage afterwards, until the whole world is certified polio-free."

But still, India's success against polio is already paying off, says Dr. Poonam Khetrapal Singh, the deputy director of WHO's Southeast Asia regional office. She says the polio campaign has laid the foundation to better protect children from illness and premature death by providing a template for more rigorous routine immunizations. "The polio eradication experience now can be used for other vaccine-preventable diseases," she says. She'd like to eliminate measles next.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Julie McCarthy has spent most of career traveling the world for NPR. She's covered wars, prime ministers, presidents and paupers. But her favorite stories "are about the common man or woman doing uncommon things," she says.