Polio infections detected in Sabah, Labuan in Malaysia

After a 7-month pause polio infections have been detected again, this time in both Sabah and the Federal Territory of Labuan (a group of islands off the NW coast of Sabah). News sources are reporting that only one of the four children found to be infected was ‘local’ - their ages ranged from 4mo to 11 years. In other polio news, it has been a grim week for both wild poliovirus (WPV1) and circulating vaccine-derived cases (cVDPV) reported to the GPEI:  Afghanistan, seven WPV1 cases and Pakistan, two. For cVDPV2 in Africa: the DRC, 13 cases; Burkina Faso, five and Côte d’Ivoire, eight cVDPV2 cases. And in the Ukraine, only 30 percent of infants aged under 12mo are receiving their primary series of polio vaccines, sparking a health department warning the country is at high risk of an outbreak. Lastly, at the 25th meeting of the IHR Emergency Committee on June 23, it was noted that ‘the global situation remains of great concern’ and so the Temporary Recommendations under the PHEIC will be extended for a further three months. Mixed news with regards to WPV1 as the YTD case numbers in Afghanistan and Pakistan rose to 83 compared with 60 for the same period in 2019, but Nigeria has been declared WPV-free. Of the States no longer infected by cVDPV, but which remain vulnerable to re-infection (Mozambique, PNG, Indonesia and China), there are no specific vaccination requirements for residents, long-term visitors and travellers but these countries must enhance surveillance activities and intensify vaccination efforts before reporting back to the committee after 12 months. Read More