TheCitizen - It's all about you
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
TheCitizen - It's all about you
No Result
View All Result

Sustaining Nigeria’s polio-free status – Punch

The Citizen by The Citizen
September 2 2020
in Public Affairs
A A
0
Paralysing polio – The Nation

Twenty-four years after African Heads of State committed to eradicating polio during the 32nd Ordinary Session of the Organisation of African Unity (now African Union) in Yaoundé, Cameroon, the dream finally became a reality on August 25, 2020 when the Independent Africa Regional Certification Commission certified Africa free of the wild poliovirus.

Indeed, Africa has come a long way by eradicating a disease, which as of 1996 was paralysing an estimated 75,000 children annually on the continent. According to the World Health Organisation, concerted efforts at polio eradication have prevented up to 1.8 million children from crippling life-long paralysis and saved approximately 180,000 lives.

Amid the celebrations, however, there remain legitimate concerns and challenges that must be addressed if Nigeria and by extension, Africa, is to remain polio-free. Nigeria, the supposed Giant of Africa, was the last African country among the 47 countries in the WHO African region to be certified polio-free having recorded four cases of the dreaded disease in the war-ravaged Borno State in 2016. This development delayed Africa’s polio-free certification by three years.

It was estimated that in 2016, health officials lacked access to 500,000 children due to the activities of insurgents in the North-East. Some officials who were brave enough to go into the terrorist territory paid the supreme price. In 2013, a roadside bombing killed polio vaccinators in the North. Two terrorists reportedly used a four-year-old child as a decoy to track down and kill volunteers, one of whom was a mother of eight. According to reports, some courageous vaccinators had to disguise their vaccine carriers or hide them under their hijab, while soldiers had to personally immunise children in some extreme circumstances. Despite these heroic efforts, however, 10,000 children still lack access to routine immunisation in Borno State, according to the WHO. This is therefore not the time to be complacent.

Worthy of note is that the two Middle East countries – Afghanistan and Pakistan – that remain the only two countries with confirmed cases of polio, have also witnessed terrorist activities disrupting routine immunisation, which sometimes leads to the death of vaccinators. Peace remains a conditio sine qua non for the health sector to thrive. The Federal Government should therefore speedily crush the Boko Haram insurgency, which has lingered for 10 years.

Also, the existence of polio in any country remains a threat to the rest of the world. As Nelson Mandela stated at the launch of the ‘Kick Polio Out of Africa’ campaign in August 1996, “Children that have not been immunised will remain susceptible to the disease, even in areas where cases of polio have not been seen for some time.” It was therefore not surprising when an outbreak between 2003 and 2006 in northern Nigeria led to national and international spread of the disease, re-infecting and causing 1,475 cases in 20 previously polio-free countries including faraway Indonesia and Yemen.

As the Director-General of the WHO, Tedros Ghebreyesus, rightly stated during the certification ceremony of Africa’s polio-free status, “The end of wild polio in Africa is a great day. But as we all know, it’s not the end of polio. Sixteen countries still face outbreaks of vaccine-derived poliovirus, and we have a hard road ahead to eradicate wild poliovirus from Afghanistan and Pakistan. As long as polio persists anywhere, it’s a threat everywhere.”

So, while the disease may have been eradicated from Africa, it remains a threat. Vigilance and surveillance remain essential. Indeed, the current outbreak of vaccine-derived polio in Nigeria and 15 other countries stems from the oral polio vaccine used in lower income countries because it is cheap and easy to administer. This could undermine the gains of the eradication of the wild poliovirus. Although it is not as deadly as the eradicated polio, experts say in rare cases, vaccine-derived polio could lead to paralysis, especially in places with poor sanitation and large numbers of unvaccinated children.

If some oral polio vaccines are infecting children, then this development could dissuade an already sceptical and highly-illiterate people from taking their children for the routine immunisation thereby opening a floodgate of new infections.

But there are more matters of concern. The COVID-19 pandemic – which has upended our way of life – has also interrupted routine immunisation in several African countries. Henrietta Fore, the Executive Director of UNICEF, called COVID-19 a “global health emergency that not only threatens people’s lives, it also threatens to interrupt our work to deliver the polio vaccine and so many other lifesaving interventions in Africa.” The government must therefore avoid the temptation of cutting budgets for immunisation in favour of the COVID-19 response. Rather, such health services should be integrated with the COVID-19 surveillance, killing two birds with one stone.

Education and sensitisation must also continue in order to counter deadly narratives. The vaccine boycott in northern Nigeria, which lasted from 2003 to 2004, was caused by jejune conspiracy theories that the vaccines were designed to make children sterile or had been infected with HIV to kill and reduce the North’s population. This rumour, which was propagated by community leaders, politicians and clerics, frustrated the country’s response to the deadly disease and by 2008, Nigeria alone accounted for 86 per cent of all the polio cases on the continent, according to experts.

Nigerians have continued to suffer the effects of poor leadership and a crippling and underfunded health sector with universal health coverage at a paltry 5.0 per cent as of 2018 and the current federal health budget at just 4.0 per cent of the total budget. The country has had to depend largely on foreign governments and donors like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance. They invested billions of dollars to make Nigeria polio-free. This is an unsustainable model for the development of the health sector of any country.

Nigeria has continued to witness periodic outbreaks of cholera, hepatitis, monkeypox, Lassa fever, meningitis and yellow fever, which are preventable. Nigeria still accounts for 25 per cent of the world’s malaria burden. The victory over polio, therefore, should strengthen the resolve of Nigerians to improve the health sector. It should not be a reason to return to complacency like Nigeria did after defeating Ebola. The victory over polio should be the impetus for tackling other diseases and ensuring a better health sector.

Previous Post

FCT Vocational Centre empowers persons with disabilities

Next Post

Tighter control – The Nation

Related Posts

Recycled leaders, Recycled problems – PM News
Politics

Recycled leaders, Recycled problems – PM News

May 26 2026
Bandits attack Katsina govt bus, abduct passengers
Public Affairs

Don’t allow insurgents to kill education – Punch

May 26 2026
Hepatitis: Rescuing Nigerians from needless deaths – Punch
Public Affairs

Hepatitis: Rescuing Nigerians from needless deaths – Punch

May 22 2026
Mass failure: JAMB, VCs to review UTME results Thursday
Public Affairs

UTME reforms, admissions waivers – Punch

May 20 2026
In 2027 elections, voter apathy looms large – Punch
Public Affairs

In 2027 elections, voter apathy looms large – Punch

May 18 2026
Oyo school attacks: A call to action for South West governors – Punch
Public Affairs

Oyo school attacks: A call to action for South West governors – Punch

May 17 2026
Next Post
Tighter control – The Nation

Tighter control – The Nation

Scotland announces draft bill for second independence referendum

Scotland announces draft bill for second independence referendum

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FROM THE GRASSROOTS

Alaafin urges FG to strengthen native intelligence after Oyo school attacks

Alaafin urges FG to strengthen native intelligence after Oyo school attacks

by The Editor
May 17 2026
0

...

Gov. Adeleke deposes Oba Joseph Oloyede, Apetu of Ipetumodu

Gov. Adeleke deposes Oba Joseph Oloyede, Apetu of Ipetumodu

by The Editor
May 12 2026
0

...

Ebonyi State lifts 3-month curfew after bloody boundary crisis

Ebonyi State lifts 3-month curfew after bloody boundary crisis

by The Editor
May 5 2026
0

...

Ondo community begs Gov. Aiyedatiwa to intervene in regent appointment crisis

Ondo community begs Gov. Aiyedatiwa to intervene in regent appointment crisis

by The Editor
April 30 2026
0

...

APPOINTMENTS

Elumelu joins Seplat board after $496m share acquisition

Elumelu joins Seplat board after $496m share acquisition

by The Editor
May 21 2026
0

...

Tinubu appoints 39-year-old Prof as new JAMB registrar

Tinubu appoints 39-year-old Prof as new JAMB registrar

by The Editor
May 21 2026
0

...

Soludo reshuffles power structure, swears in 18 Commissioners

Soludo reshuffles power structure, swears in 18 Commissioners

by The Editor
May 18 2026
0

...

Tinubu creates Homeland Security adviser role, appoints ex-army general

Tinubu creates Homeland Security adviser role, appoints ex-army general

by The Editor
May 11 2026
0

...

ODDITIES

Bus driver stabs transport officer to death in Calabar

Bus driver stabs transport officer to death in Calabar

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

Hoodlums kill Imo nursing student

Hoodlums kill Imo nursing student

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

Police arrest officer for threating to kill anyone recording him on duty

Police arrest officer for threating to kill anyone recording him on duty

by The Editor
May 21 2026
0

GLOBAL NEWS

Pope Leo XIV apologizes for Vatican’s role in legitimizing slavery

Pope Leo XIV apologizes for Vatican’s role in legitimizing slavery

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

...

2026 World Cup: Our host is FIFA, not Trump or America– Iran

Iran accuses US of violating ceasefire

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

...

Senegal: Ousted Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko emerges national assembly speaker

Senegal: Ousted Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko emerges national assembly speaker

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

...

Several die after train hits school bus in Belgium

Several die after train hits school bus in Belgium

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

...

Sierra Leone welcomes first US deportation flight under Trump crackdown

Sierra Leone welcomes first US deportation flight under Trump crackdown

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

...

State of the States

Kano closes schools for Eid-el-Kabir

Gov. Yusuf approves N20,000 Eid package for Kano civil servants

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

...

Benue governor secures return ticket

Benue governor secures return ticket

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

...

Lagos restricts access to magistrate courts, denies ban on sureties

Lagos restricts access to magistrate courts, denies ban on sureties

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

...

Kano closes schools for Eid-el-Kabir

Kano closes schools for Eid-el-Kabir

by The Editor
May 20 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Police arrest mother, daughter over N18m romance scam

Police arrest mother, daughter over N18m romance scam

May 28 2026
Fubara’s brother declares Rivers governorship ambition, vows to serve one term

Fubara’s brother declares Rivers governorship ambition, vows to serve one term

May 28 2026
Atiku takes early lead in ADC presidential primaries, wins five states

Atiku wins ADC ticket, seeks unity with Amaechi, Hayatu-Deen

May 28 2026
US accuses Nigeria Police, Army of colluding with Fulani militias to launch attacks

US accuses Nigeria Police, Army of colluding with Fulani militias to launch attacks

May 28 2026

EDITORIAL REVIEW

Recycled leaders, Recycled problems – PM News

Recycled leaders, Recycled problems – PM News

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

Bandits attack Katsina govt bus, abduct passengers

Don’t allow insurgents to kill education – Punch

by The Editor
May 26 2026
0

Hepatitis: Rescuing Nigerians from needless deaths – Punch

Hepatitis: Rescuing Nigerians from needless deaths – Punch

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

Mass failure: JAMB, VCs to review UTME results Thursday

UTME reforms, admissions waivers – Punch

by The Editor
May 20 2026
0

In 2027 elections, voter apathy looms large – Punch

In 2027 elections, voter apathy looms large – Punch

by The Editor
May 18 2026
0

Opinion

School attacks and the death of ethics

School attacks and the death of ethics

by The Editor
May 22 2026
0

...

The dangers of a one-party state

The dangers of a one-party state

by The Editor
May 5 2026
0

...

Dear Senator Tinubu, Buhari has thrashed us all!

NBC’s real struggle

by The Editor
April 30 2026
0

...

Even INEC admonishes the media?

Even INEC admonishes the media?

by The Editor
April 12 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.