Global polio updates and hss (1)
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Transcript of Global polio updates and hss (1)
GLOBAL POLIO UPDATES, POLIO END
GAME AND HEALTH SYSTEMS
STRENGTHENING
CGPP-ADRA INDIA ANNUAL REVIEW MEETING,
17TH-18TH MAY 2016, MUSSOORIE
Dr. Suchitra Lisam, National Health Programs Manager,
ADRA India
PRESENTATION OUTLINE
PART I : POLIO AT A GLANCE
PART II: GLOBAL POLIO UPDATES
PART III: END GAME /ERADICATION TIMELINES
PART IV: HEALTH SYSTEMS STRENGTHENING, POLIO
LEGACY IN INDIA
POLIO AT A GLANCE
PART I
POLIO AT A GLANCE
Global Polio Eradication Initiatives (GPEI) is a public-private partnership spearheaded by WHO, Rotary International, US-CDC and UNICEF supported by key partners including BMG Foundation and GAVI- the vaccine alliance
99% reduction in polio since 1988
350,000 cases in 125 endemic countries in 1988
74 cases in 2 endemic countries (Pakistan, Afghanistan) in 2015
3 types of wild polio viruses (type 1, 2, 3)
Wild poliovirus type 2 last detected in 1999, global eradication declared in Sep 2015
POLIO AT A GLANCE –contd.
Wild poliovirus type 3 not detected since Dec 2012
2 types of vaccine- OPV and IPV
More than 1.5 million childhood deaths prevented since 1988
15 million cases averted since 1988
More than 5000 m child immunized every year through Routine Immunization and campaigns
World Health Assembly has declared completion of polio eradication as a programmatic emergency for global public health.
ELIMINATION STATUS
GLOBAL UPDATES
PART II
GLOBAL UPDATES (April’16)
The Global Oral Polio Vaccine Switch, statistics on
WPV/cVDPV
Immunization week
Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on
Immunization (SAGE) Meeting
Protecting Children in Countries Vulnerable to Polio
GLOBAL OPV SWITCH
GLOBAL OPV SWITCH-contd.
From the 17 April to the 1 May, 155 countries and territories participated in the historic trivalent to bivalent oral polio vaccine switch, withdrawing the type 2 component of the vaccine to protect future generations against circulating vaccine derived polioviruses (cVDPV)
Type 2 component of the oral polio vaccine (OPV) is being removed from use from the trivalent to bivalent oral polio vaccine to withdraw OPV in a phased manner starting with type 2 component following the eradication of wild poliovirus type 2 in September 2015
GLOBAL OPV SWITCH-contd.
152 of 155 (98%) countries and territories have
stopped using the trivalent oral polio vaccine.
Independent monitoring to ensure the switch goes
smoothly has begun in 126 of 153 countries (82%).
The National Validation Committee has received switch
monitoring data from 16 of 153 countries.
The WHO Regional Office has received the National
Validation Report from 10 countries.
GLOBAL OPV SWITCH-Contd.
WPV TYPE 1 & cVDPV -STATISTICS
Total
cases
Year-to-date 2016 Year-to-date 2015 Total in 2015
WPV cVDPV WPV cVDPV WPV cVDPV
Globally 12 3 23 1 74 32
- in
endemic
countries
12 0 23 1 74 3
- in non-
endemic
countries
0 3 0 0 0 29
Countries
Year-to-date 2016 Year-to-date 2015 Total in 2015 Onset of paralysis of most recent case
WPV cVDPV WPV cVDPV WPV cVDPV WPV cVDPV
Afghanistan 4 0 1 0 20 0 27-Mar-16 NA
Pakistan 8 0 22 1 54 2 22-Mar-16 09-Feb-15
Guinea 0 0 0 0 0 7 NA 14-Dect-15
Lao PDR 0 3 0 0 0 8 NA 11-Jan-16
Madagascar 0 0 0 0 0 10 NA 22-Aug-15
Myanmar 0 0 0 0 0 2 NA 05-Oct-15
Nigeria 0 0 0 0 0 1 NA 16-May-15
Ukraine 0 0 0 0 0 2 NA 07-Jul-15
VULNERABLE COUNTRIES
Polio remains endemic in two countries – Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Until poliovirus transmission is interrupted in these countries, all countries remain at risk of importation of polio, especially vulnerable countries with weak public health and immunization services and travel or trade links to endemic countries.
Circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus is causing an outbreak in Madagascar, Guinea and Ukraine.
Vulnerable countries : Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Syrian Arab Republic.
POLIO IN NUMBERS-2016
Wild poliovirus in 2016
- Global Total: 12 (23)
- Global WPV1: 12 (23)
- Global WPV3: 0 (0)
Endemic: 12 (23)
-Afghanistan: 4 (1)
- Pakistan: 8 (22)
Importation Countries: 0 (0)
Data as of 27 April 2016. Numbers in brackets represent data at this time in 2015
POLIO PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY
Temporary Recommendations to Reduce International Spread of Poliovirus
On 5 May 2014 the Director-General declared the international spread of wild poliovirus in 2014 a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) under the International Health Regulations [IHR 2005], issued Temporary Recommendations to reduce the international spread of wild poliovirus, and requested a reassessment of this situation by the Emergency Committee every 3 months.
The eight meeting of the Emergency Committee was held in February 2016. Based on the committee’s advice and the reports made by affected States Parties, the Director-General extended the following Temporary Recommendations under the IHR (2005), effective February 2016.
WORLD IMMUNIZATION WEEK
In 2016(April) there have only been 12 cases of polio, down from 23 cases in the same period for 2015.
World Immunization Week took place between 24 – 30 April with the theme “Close the Immunization Gap”.
SAGE MEETING
Recommends amendments of surveillance
case definition to include type 2 Sabin so
that all type 2 polioviruses will be notified
Urges all countries to ensure completion of
phase I for all type 2 polioviruses, incl.
Sabin 2
Endorsed the components of updated
MOV strategy to improve coverage,
equity and timeliness of vaccination
Implementation research- more attention
Immunization specific indicators to assess
progress towards <5 mortality target of
SDGs
PROTECTING CHILDREN IN VULNERABLE AREAS
Keeping levels of immunity high by strengthening RI, carrying out polio vaccination campaigns and keeping vigilant surveillance systems for early warning should the virus return is a top priority for the GPEI.
In Jordan, the Ministry of Health with the support of WHO, UNICEF and partners, recently completed a mass immunization campaign against polio, reaching >1 million children <5 across the country with OPV
KEY CHALLENGES
Delivering quality health services.
Improving reach, tracking missed children with OPV
in endemic countries
Keeping up the pressure
Despite the gains, there is still much to be done, not
only in Afghanistan and Pakistan but also in
countries with declining immunization rates. So long
as polio continues to circulate anywhere, children
everywhere are at risk.
END GAME PLAN/ ERADICATION TIMELINES
PART-III
Polio Eradication and Endgame Strategic Plan 2013–2018
IPV INTRODUCTION TIMELINES
POLIO ERADICATION TIMELINES
GPEI AND HEALTH SYSTEMS STRENGTHENING,
POLIO LEGACY-HEALTH SECTOR
PART -IV
BUILDING BLOCKS FRAMEWORKS OF HEALTH
SYSTEMS
POLIO LEGACY/SCOPE IN VPDs PROG
Over the past 25 years, GPEI-funded personnel
and infrastructure have supported the distribution
of global and country health priorities including
anti-measles vaccines
vitamin A supplements
anti-malarial bednets
deworming pills
surveillance for yellow fever and avian influenza
INDIA POLIO LEGACY
Polio legacy in Action
Mainstreaming critical polio eradication functions into other priority health programmes
Ensuring that the best practices and knowledge gained over years are shared with other health initiatives
Transitioning certain polio functional areas to government counterparts
Transitioning the capacities, processes and assets created by the programme to support other vaccine preventable diseases & strengthening health systems
TRANSITION OF ACTION
Polio funded assets of WHO, UNICEF & CORE and others are
supporting RI strengthening activities in India
Lessons learnt from polio/best practices being applied for RI &
control/elimination of VPDs
Mission Indradhanush (MI) as a good example of government
led legacy in action for RI campaigns.
Other transition areas- health, sanitation, nutrition, Ebola
Transition/Legacy Plans are progressing and new initiatives to
bring it under one umbrella.
Legacy Documentation is a major priority, ongoing
TRANSITION OF ACTION
Transitioning assets/functions and applying lessons learned
Strengthening routine immunization • Intensified RI monitoring –generating data on quality of immunization, availability of vaccines/logistics, reasons for low RI coverage and Zinc/ORS availability.
Accountability through Task Forces, established in 36 states and 668 districts to review program data.
Capacity building of frontline workers
Advocacy and integrated communication including high risk areas in RI session planning – 96% of high risk areas now included in RI micro plans.
New vaccine introduction (Pentavalent; IPV, MR, Rotavirus) – Developing field guidelines, training material and checklists for assessing preparedness at district/state levels; conducting post-introduction and coverage evaluations. Measles elimination and rubella control –
TRANSITION IN ACTION
Supported catch-up campaigns covering approximately 119 million children. Visceral leishmaniasis (Kala Azar) elimination – Monitoring indoor residual spraying; contributing to national elimination strategy development. VPD surveillance
Coordinating validation of MNT elimination; capacity building for lab personnel; launched lab supported surveillance for diphtheria, pertussis and neonatal tetanus with expansion planned in 2015
AEFI surveillance – Assisting with updated guidelines; training AEFI committees; supporting electronic case reporting. Supporting international health programs –Indian SMOs deployed to Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Liberia in 2014-15.
LEGACY DOCUMENTATION
Completed
Hosting Learning Missions – Afghanistan
and Pakistan
Documents on Transition/Successful
Strategies in States
Completed Legacy photographic book
– demonstrating innovations/game
changers to triumph over polio
Several films 7 documenting Social
Mobilization strategies, new PBS film
on transition polio to RI, short film
polio for RI.
India Polio Learning Exchange website
Underway/planned 2015-2016
Joint papers with WHO, GOI and
partners under discussion
SMNet Legacy Review (PWC) –
critical factors for success, SMNet
location/# for RI, and transition options
SMNet Impact on RI, Convergence,
Diarrhea morbidly and mortality
IPV Introduction preparedness
KAP
Impact on the mobilizers themselves