Seattle (US):A pause in the immunisation programme at the beginning of Covid pandemic has led to the finding of fresh polio cases in countries like the US, UK and Mozambique this year, according to an expert associated with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The finding of the poliovirus was also a reminder that if it exists anywhere in the world, it remains a threat everywhere, said Dr Ananda Sankar Bandyopadhyay, Deputy Director of Technology, Research and Analytics at the Foundation's Polio Team.
The virus of polio was found in wastewater in a part of London and New York some months back. A case of wild poliovirus was detected in Mozambique in May and another in Malawi in February this year. Any polio detection is a result of low immunisation rates. When the Covid-19 pandemic first hit in 2020, polio campaigns were briefly paused for four months to protect communities and health workers from the coronavirus spread.
This led to some increased spread of the poliovirus in countries," Bandyopadhyay told PTI in an exclusive interview here. It was clear that the Covid pandemic has had a negative impact on immunisation rates globally, said the epidemiologist who graduated with a gold medal from Calcutta National Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata in 2005.
However, there were other challenges like misinformation, vaccine hesitancy, and issues like reaching every community with the polio vaccine, he said. Bandyopadhyay coordinates global research aimed at achieving and sustaining polio eradication besides developing novel polio vaccines, generation of data to generate polio immunisation policies, and advancement of improved detection and surveillance tools.
"The recent polio detections in the US and UK and wild poliovirus outbreak in Malawi and Mozambique confirmed earlier this year are an urgent reminder that if polio exists anywhere in the world, it remains a threat everywhere, Bandyopadhyay said. Wild poliovirus was last reported in the USA and UK in 1979 and 1982 respectively, while in the case of Malawi and Mozambique, the years were 1992 and 1992, according to the website of Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a WHO agency.
Polio-free countries are not polio-risk free until global eradication is achieved, said the epidemiologist who completed his graduation from Calcutta National Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata in 2005. To a question, Bandyopadhyay said the health authorities in the US and the UK are responding appropriately, launching urgent vaccination campaigns to protect those at risk and intensifying disease surveillance systems to better track virus spread.