
Shifting Strategy: Nigeria Needs to Remain Polio-Free
As Nigeria approaches two years with no child paralysed by
wild poliovirus, much remains to be done to secure a polio-free world for
future generations.
With the two year milestone since the most recent case of
wild poliovirus in Nigeria approaching, the Expert Review Committee (ERC) on
Polio Eradication and Routine Immunization has emphasised there is no place for
complacency to keep the country polio-free.
Meeting in Abuja on 21 – 22 June, the ERC emphasised that
the strategy in Nigeria must now shift: from interrupting transmission to
staying polio free, sustaining the hard-won gains, strengthening routine
immunization and responding to outbreaks of vaccine-derived polioviruses.
Important progress has been made in 2016 with nearly two
years having passed since the last case of wild poliovirus was reported in
Kano, and the type 2 component of the oral polio vaccine being removed from use
in April, as part of a global vaccine switch. Yet the ERC emphasised the need
to fill sub-national surveillance gaps, to make significant improvements to
routine immunization and to address risks to the programme such as waning
political commitment and accountability and the inaccessibility of some
populations in the North-East.
Improving immunity and strengthening surveillance
The ERC assessed that recent supplementary immunization
activities in Nigeria have been of good quality, with the number of children
missed going down. This has been thanks to programmatic improvements such as
activities in between campaigns at religious gatherings, and hit-and-run
activities in inaccessible areas to rapidly protect vulnerable children. In
newly accessible areas, innovations such as expanded age range campaigns are
being considered to rapidly increase immunity in as much of the population as
possible.
Overall, the ERC recognised that surveillance in Nigeria is
strong, but with sub-national gaps that still need to be addressed. The ERC
recommended determining how resources could be optimally used to fill these
gaps. Both surveillance for acute flaccid paralysis and environmental
surveillance have important roles to play in the coming years. Only once three
years have passed in Nigeria with no case of wild poliovirus and strong
surveillance systems can the WHO African Region be certified as polio-free,
making the strengthening.
Strengthening surveillance in Nigeria relies on outreach to
many members of communities in the most vulnerable areas of the country,
including traditional healers. WHO/L.Dore
Stopping all polioviruses
As well as keeping Nigeria free from wild polio, the ERC
also recognised steps to stop vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPVs). In April,
Nigeria successfully implemented the trivalent to bivalent oral polio vaccine
switch, withdrawing the type 2 component of the oral polio vaccine alongside
155 other countries and territories worldwide within a two week period. In the
long term, the switch will play an essential role in stopping the emergence of
strains of type 2 vaccine-derived poliovirus outbreaks, which can emerge when
routine immunization coverage is inadequate. The ERC also commended Nigeria for
the successful campaigns that were carried out to make sure that immunity
against type 2 was high at the time of the switch across the whole country.
Nigeria has seen one outbreak of circulating VDPV type 2
this year, in Borno state, in a sample taken from the environment on 23 March,
before the switch took place. In response, the Director General of WHO approved
the release of monovalent oral polio vaccine type 2 for up to three rounds to
build immunity and stop the outbreak. The ERC congratulated Nigeria for their
rapid response to this outbreak, with innovations and detailed micro-plans
ensuring strong coverage and also recommended that Nigeria consider the possibility
of using fractional dose inactivated polio vaccine for outbreak response
strategies to further build up immunity against all types of poliovirus.
Strengthening Routine Immunization
The ERC was encouraged by the efforts of the Government of
Nigeria and partners to improve routine immunization services. In particular,
they noted the role of the polio eradication Emergency Operation Centers in
improving logistics and tracking routine immunization coverage in 56 priority
Local Government Areas. Yet with insecurity and insufficient coverage in some
northern states, the ERC emphasised that investing in strengthening routine
immunization through a comprehensive primary health care strategy must now be
the priority of the government and partners in order to sustain the gains of
the polio eradication programme and protect children against other
vaccine-preventable diseases.
Mothers gather at a health camp in northern Nigeria to get
vaccines against polio and other diseases for their children. WHO/L.Dore
Transition Planning
The ERC also reviewed Nigeria’s progress towards planning
for the ramp down of polio eradication funding in the coming years once
eradication is achieved, and the potential to transition the polio assets and
infrastructure to help meet other health needs. Nigeria is currently mapping
the polio funded assets of both partners and the government, and is beginning
to document lessons learned from the last few decades of polio eradication
efforts in order to share their insights with other health programmes. The ERC
recommended that the transition planning process align the redeployment of
polio assets with the priorities and gaps of the primary health care system. A
plan for transition should be completed by the end of 2016, driven by the government
and with input from a broad range of polio and non-polio stakeholders,
including donors.
Keeping Nigeria Polio Free
With progress made and challenges ahead, continued efforts
in Nigeria are as crucial as ever in the light of two years with no wild
poliovirus. With two remaining endemic countries – Pakistan and Afghanistan –
no unimmunized child anywhere in the world is free from the threat of polio,
especially where routine immunization is weak. Stakeholders of the polio
eradication programme in Nigeria must continue full pelt until the continent
has been certified free from the virus.
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