City
Epaper

Gaza reports first polio case in 25 years amid conflict-battered health system

By IANS | Updated: August 17, 2024 12:40 IST

Ramallah, Aug 17 The Gaza Strip recorded the first case of poliovirus infection in 25 years as the ...

Open in App

Ramallah, Aug 17 The Gaza Strip recorded the first case of poliovirus infection in 25 years as the enclave continues to toil in the protracted conflict.

The Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry on Friday said a 10-month-old child in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, tested positive for a vaccine-derived poliovirus strain.

Before the ongoing conflict began in October 2023, the enclave had been polio-free for 25 years, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), Xinhua news agency reported.

The child, who had not received any polio vaccinations, displayed symptoms doctors suspected matched polio disease. After conducting the necessary tests in Jordan, the ministry confirmed the infection as a strain of vaccine-derived poliovirus.

The ministry said its teams in Gaza and the West Bank, in collaboration with international organisations, have been working over the past weeks to develop a comprehensive plan for an expanded vaccination campaign against polio in the Gaza Strip.

The ongoing Israeli "aggression" against Gaza has caused a health disaster in the enclave, it added.

Earlier on Friday, the United Nations said it is set to launch a two-phase campaign to vaccinate more than 640,000 children in Gaza under the age of 10 starting at the end of August.

The WHO has already approved the release of 1.6 million doses of the polio vaccine and the UN Children's Fund is coordinating delivery efforts and the cold chain equipment needed for storage, the UN said.

Meanwhile, Hamas said in a statement that it supports the UN's call on Friday for a seven-day truce to vaccinate thousands of children against polio, and demands the delivery of medicine and food to more than two million Palestinians trapped in the enclave.

UN statistics showed that Gaza had 99 per cent vaccination coverage prior to the conflict that erupted in October 2023, a rate that has now dropped to 86 per cent due to the decimation of the health system, lack of security, destruction of infrastructure, mass displacement, and shortage of medical supplies.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSarbananda Sonowal envisions BIMSTEC Pact as blueprint to transform Bay of Bengal into global trade and tourism hub

CricketRahul's drop or Pant's runout? Karthik, Hussain identify match-turning moment of India's 22-run defeat at Lord's

InternationalJaishankar holds talks with Chinese counterpart, speaks of need for far-seeing approach to bilateral ties

Other SportsCentenarian marathon runner Fauja Singh dies in a road accident in Punjab

NationalBMC taking action to improve public sanitation in Mumbai: Maha Minister

Health Realted Stories

HealthNamibia eyes tobacco, alcohol tax reforms to combat public health crisis

Health‘Youth Spiritual Summit’ in Varanasi to kick off special drive against drug addiction: Mansukh Mandaviya

HealthWHO recommends twice-a-year lenacapavir jab to boost global HIV prevention

HealthWarning boards for samosas & jalebis: A big step to curb obesity in India, say experts

HealthOral health key for cancer care, boosting survival rates: AIIMS