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Thanks to vaccines and years of determined, hard work, humanity is on the verge of one of the greatest public health accomplishments ever: eradicating polio. When we get there, it will be only the second time in history that a human disease has been eradicated. The first, of course, was smallpox. And that milestone came as result of an effective vaccine and the broad, sustained effort to immunize people worldwide against the disease.
World Immunization Week is a good time to assess our progress against polio, a disease so dreaded in the United States that it once ranked only behind nuclear war as a prevailing public concern.
Thanks to an effective vaccine, we are moving aggressively to eradicate polio worldwide so that fear is a distant memory in the United States.
In 1988, there were an estimated 350,000 annual cases of wild polio virus (WPV) spread across more than 125 countries. By 2017, those numbers had plummeted to 22 cases of WPV in only two countries – Afghanistan and Pakistan.
So far in 2018, eight cases of WPV have been reported from Afghanistan and Pakistan. With the strong efforts made to rid the world of this deadly disease, we are closer to a world in which every child would be safe from the paralysis the virus causes, and no family will ever have to bear the emotional and financial costs of the disease again.
Sincerely,
/Rebecca Martin/
Rebecca Martin, PhD Director, Center for Global Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov/globalhealth
/W. William Schluter/
W. William Schluter, MD, MSPH Director, Global Immunization Division Center for Global Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov/globalhealth/ |
martes, 24 de abril de 2018
Dear Colleagues: World Immunization Week
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