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India to be declared polio-free

India has announced polio eradication after three years since its last reported case, a landmark in the global battle against the disease.

It is seen as confirmation of one of India’s biggest public health successes, achieved through a massive and sustained immunization program.

India’s health minister hailed it as a “monumental milestone”.

In 2012 the World Health Organization (WHO) removed India from the list of polio-endemic countries. Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria remain on it.

The list refers to countries in which the virus is circulating freely and the transmission of the infectious disease has not been stopped.

Despite India’s success, health experts fear a resurgence of polio in other parts of the world.

“This monumental milestone was possible due to unwavering political will at the highest level, commitment of adequate financial resources, technological innovation … and the tireless efforts of millions of workers including more than 23 lakh (2.3 million) vaccinators,” Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad told reporters.

India is marking three years since its last reported polio case

India is marking three years since its last reported polio case

The WHO is expected to formally certify India’s polio-free status next month after testing its last samples.

“India has now set other important public health goals as a result of the confidence that the country has got from the successful eradication of polio,” the WHO’s Hamid Jafari told AFP news agency, citing a new goal to eradicate measles.

Only one case of polio was recorded in India in 2011, down from 741 in 2009. It came from the eastern state of West Bengal in 2011 when an 18-month-old girl was found to have contracted the disease.

After the eradication of smallpox in 1980, polio is the second disease in India that has been eliminated through immunization.

Nearly 2.3 million volunteers vaccinate some 170 million children under five years of age in India during every round of immunization.

Polio is capable of causing crippling disability or death within hours. It plagued societies in ancient times – and was present in more than 100 countries even in the 1980s, when it left 350,000 people paralyzed each year.

Global cases have decreased since then as part of a mass eradication program – to 372 in 2013.

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