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Polio Eradication Immunisation CampaignCountryEthiopia RegionAfrica Programme SummaryIn 2005, the World Health Organization (WHO), the Federal Ministry of Health, and the Regional Health Bureaus developed plans to mount emergency immunisation activities to prevent further spread of Wild Polio Virus (WPV) in Ethiopia. A house-to-house eradication campaign is being supported by advocacy drawing on the participation of high-level political leaders and the media, as well as community-based awareness and mobilisation activities. The aim is to immunise 15.5 million children under the age of 5 against polio, thus containing its spread within the country. Communication StrategiesEthiopia's outbreak response comprises: The main communication strategies used during this campaign are: Advocacy Social Mobilisation
These activities have included:
Capacity Building Development IssuesImmunisation & Vaccines, Children. Key PointsA massive polio outbreak in Sudan that has paralysed 132 Sudanese children since May 2004 has spread to Ethiopia. In February 2005, WHO confirmed two cases of polio in the Tigray region; genetic sequencing data confirmed that the two cases are linked to polio circulating in Sudan. As of March 20 2006 a total of 24 polio cases have been confirmed in Ethiopia; the polio virus transmission has been geographically restricted to the three regions of Amhara, Oromia and Tigray. WHO indicates that there is a rapidly narrowing epidemiological window in which to eradicate the disease. Prior to these newly-reported cases, Ethiopia had been polio-free since January 2001. Routine immunisation coverage rose from 52% in 2002 to 65% in 2004. Similarly, in 2004 the country satisfactorily achieved all the AFP surveillance performance indicators (NPAFP rate 1.5, target > 1/100,000; population under 15 years of age and stool adequacy rate 85%, target > 80%). Polio-affected countries have set as their target the interruption of polio transmission by the end of 2005, as part of the 18-year effort to eradicate the disease. PartnersWHO, Rotary International, USAID, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), and UNICEF. Funding for the October/November NIDs provided by WHO, UNICEF, the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), the Gates Foundation, and the Department for International Development (DFID). ContactFederal Ministry of Health:
Link Dr. Asnakew Yigzaw EPI Expert Tel.: 251 1 2555023/251 1517011/251 9 240097 Fax: 251 1 514037 asnakewy@et.afro.who.int Dr. Assefu Lemlem EPI Expert Tel.: 251 1 2555023/251 1517011/251 9 233904 Fax: 251 1 514037 asseful@et.afro.who.int World Health Organization: Dr. Olusegun Babaniyi WHO Representative, Addis Ababa Tel.: 251 1 531550/445181 Fax: 251 1 514037 babaniyio@et.afro.who.int Dr. Femi Oyewole EPI Team Leader Tel.: 251 1 514031/444403/251 9 200598 Fax: 251 1 514037 oyewolef@et.afro.who.int Mr. Mohammed Idris EPI, Social Mobilization Coordinator Tel.: 251 1 514031/444287/251 9 233903 Fax: 251 1 514037 mohammedi@et.afro.who.int Mrs. Yemesrach Tadesse EPI, Information & Communication Assistant Tel.: 00251 1 514031/444265/251 9 200765 Fax: 251 1 514037 yemesracht@et.afro.who.int SourcePolio Special Alert March 2005, sent from Indrias Getachew (OIC Communication Section, UNICEF Ethiopia) to The Communication Initiative on March 10 2005; and emails from Yemesrach Tadesse (WHO) to The Communication Initiative on April 6 2005, December 3 2005, December 16 2005, January 13 2006, and April 12 2006. Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site December 07 2005 Last Updated September 25 2007 |
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