Pakistan conducted national immunization days (NIDs) for the first time in 1994. To estimate coverage, to evaluate risk factors for failure to be immunized, and to determine the effectiveness of mass media, parents of 1288 children in 714 households in four districts were surveyed after the first NID round. In each district, a high proportion of children (93%-96%) received oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) during the NID. In three districts, unimmunized or partially immunized children were less likely to receive NID OPV than were fully immunized children (Kohistan, P < .001; Quetta, P < .001; and Sibi, P = .05). Although a high proportion of children in each age cohort received NID OPV, in three districts children 0-11 months of age were less likely to receive NID OPV than were older children. Television and radio reached a high proportion of survey households, but other mass media were less effectively utilized. Risk factor and media effectiveness surveys provide important information that is useful for planning future NIDs.
Between November 1991 and March 1992, 37 cases of paralytic poliomyelitis occurred in Jordan, where none had been reported since 1988. Of these, 17 (50%) of 34 patients had received at least three doses of oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV3). The first and 2 subsequent case-patients were children of Pakistani migrant workers, and the first 8 and a total of 27 (75%) case-patients resided in or near the Jordan Valley. A seroepidemiologic study of 987 children in all regions of Jordan was performed to assess OPV3 coverage and immune response to OPV. Although OPV3 coverage by 12 months of age was high (96%) in the general population, coverage was lower among Pakistani (21%), Bedouin (63%), and Gypsy (9%) children (P < .001). Seroprevalences for poliovirus type 3 were 71% in the Jordan Valley versus 81% in other regions after 3 doses of OPV (P < .06) and 77% in the Jordan Valley versus 98% in other regions after 5 doses of OPV (P < .001). This outbreak demonstrates the importance of achieving high seroimmunity to infection in all geographic areas to prevent the reintroduction and spread of imported strains of wild poliovirus.
The Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) of the World Health Organization has made substantial progress toward eradicating poliomyelitis. From 1988 to 1995, the number of confirmed cases of polio decreased 66%, from 2342 to 789. National immunization days were conducted in 18 (78%) of the 23 countries in 1995, representing 88% of the regional population. By 1995, 20 countries (87%) in the EMR had established systems for reporting acute flaccid paralysis (AFP), 20 (87%) were investigating AFP or polio cases epidemiologically, 18 (78%) had initiated follow-up at 60 days to confirm or discard suspected polio cases, 7 (30%) had achieved nonpolio AFP rates of > or = 1.0/100,000 children <15 years of age (a measure of the sensitivity of surveillance), and 16 (70%) had made laboratory investigations of polio cases for 1281 (74%) of the 1715 AFP cases reported in the EMR. Despite significant progress, the success of the polio eradication initiative in the EMR will depend on finding solutions to a number of technical, managerial, political, and financial challenges.
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