The federal government has confirmed two new cases of polio in Borno
State, a development that has dealt a blow on Nigeria’s hope of being
certified polio-free by July 2017.
The Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole, announced on Thursday that two
children in Jejere and Gwoza Local Government Areas of Borno State, had
been affected by polio virus.
The new cases were detected during a surveillance of the North-East region by health officials, Mr. Adewole said.
Before this reemergence, Nigeria had not reported a polio case since July 24, 2014, the World Health Organisation said.
Barring the new cases, Nigeria was on track to be declared polio free
on July 24, 2017. A country must not have any case for at least three
years to be declared polio-free.
To avert spread of the virus, Mr. Adewole announced emergency
measures, involving the dispatch of a response team to the North-East.
He disclosed that about five million children in four states across the North-East would receive immunisation.
“Our overriding priority right now is to rapidly boost immunity in
the affected areas to ensure that no more children are affected by this
terrible disease,” Mr. Adewole said.
Aug 13, 2016
Nigeria’s polio-free certification suffers setback as new cases are confirmed
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