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Polio Plus - A Rotary International Special Project
Over the past twenty years, Rotary club members have helped immunize over two billion children against polio. Thanks to them, the world will soon be polio-free.
In 1985, Rotary launched the PolioPlus program to protect children worldwide from the cruel and fatal consequences of polio. In the early 1980s, Rotary began planning for the most ambitious program in its history — to immunize all of world's children against polio. The plan required collaboration with international, national, and local health agencies. With the advice and support of the late Dr. Albert Sabin, developer of the oral polio vaccine, Rotary established its PolioPlus program in 1985.
This discovery further proves that no child is safe from polio, even today, until it is completely eradicated worldwide. In the United States, due to its ready access to vaccine and high immunization rates, polio poses little threat to children. However, for those who fall through the cracks, little can be done. Once a child has polio, there is no cure. The only protection is prevention, and for as little as 60 cents worth of vaccine, a child can be protected against this crippling disease for life. Rotary members worldwide are committed to immunizing every child and have made eradicating polio their top priority since 1985. Rotary and its partners at the World Health Organization, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and UNICEF have immunized more than two billion children in 122 countries. Rotary, now with 1.2 million members in nearly 170 countries, is the largest private-sector supporter of polio eradication, having raised more than US$600 million. Never before have individual volunteers and the influence of the private sector played such a core role in a global public-health effort. During the holidays, hundreds of Rotary members will travel, at their own expense, to polio-endemic countries. Joining local health workers, religious leaders, teachers, and parents, Rotary members hope to reach millions of children under the age of five during multinational polio immunization campaigns. They will work from dusk to dawn and go from house to house in the most remote villages to ensure that every child is immunized. Great progress has been made. In 1988, there were 1,000 reported polio cases per day. During the past two decades, polio cases worldwide have been slashed by 99 percent. Epidemiologists predict that polio can be stopped in all countries within a short time. Yet despite this progress, governments, health workers, and volunteers must overcome the many obstacles of war, poverty, and misinformation in order to reach every child in all corners of the world. Until polio is truly gone, children worldwide will be at risk from this cruel disease that once swept waves of panic through cities in the United States every summer in the 1940s and 1950s. For the sake of all the world's children, we must join together to fulfill the promise of a polio-free world and end the needless suffering from polio for all time.
For more information about PolioPlus, click here.
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