Friday, October 24, 2014
No Parents Left Behind: Polio a disease that still Kill children in Afghan...
No Parents Left Behind: Polio a disease that still Kill children in Afghan...: The Ebola outbreak in West African countries is a great reminder of why we need to invest in prevention before we have an epidemic. ...
Polio a disease that still Kill children in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria
The Ebola outbreak in West
African countries is a great reminder of why we need to invest in prevention
before we have an epidemic.
As we
commemorate World Polio Day today it is important to note how close we are to
eliminating many of the World’s most deadly and debilitating diseases with vaccines that cost just a few dollars.
Vaccines make a difference. Polio, a disease
that once claimed the lives of millions around the world—and paralyzed nearly
1,000 children a day—has now dropped 99 percent in the number of cases
worldwide over the last twenty years thanks to a coordinated global vaccination
effort with agencies like WHO, UNICEF, CDC, Rotary International, Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation and the United Nations.
India, one of the countries where
polio remains a serious threat, in January celebrated a significant milestone:
two years without any new reported cases of polio. The remaining three
countries where polio transmission has never been stopped—Afghanistan, Nigeria
and Pakistan-- continue to make tremendous progress in getting us to a
polio-free world. For Example Nigeria
reported only 6 cases of polio in 2014 compared to 48 cases in 2013. However,
the disease has recently reemerged in areas that had been polio free for
years. Angola, Chad and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo have experienced a recent resurgence in polio
transmissions.
I was seven years old when I
learned about polio. I was surprised,
confused and didn’t understand why my classmate had braces on her legs. I still remember the sadness I saw on this
girl eyes when the children were playing outside. Until then I never saw anyone with polio or
knew what it was. So with sadness I went
home and asked why the little child had braces. I remember learning about children being
paralyzed by polio and how many die from the disease. It was scary topic for a 7 years old and from
that day I never complained about getting my routine vaccination shots and
decided that I will be a doctor or nurse to help others.
Vaccines don’t just prevent illness; they give children like me the chance to grow up healthy, attend school, and become productive members of society.
They are a best-buy in global health, with a low cost and a
long-term payoff that extends far beyond the health of an individual child.
Please join me and became a
Champion for childhood immunizations by visiting Shot@Life.org, learn about the value of vaccines or
make a donation in this linkhttp://www.globalproblems-globalsolutions.org/site/TR?fr_id=1080&pg=entry---Just $5.00 will protect a child from polio and measles for
his lifetime—the individual acts add up to make a big difference.
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