Nationwide oral polio drive put off

Our Bureau Updated - January 12, 2021 at 01:36 PM.

A health worker administers pulse polio drop to a newborn baby at Colvin Women's Hospital in Allahabad, India, Thursday, Jan. 12, 2012. India will celebrate a full year since its last reported case of polio on Friday, a major victory in a global eradication effort that appeared to be stalled just a few years ago. If no previously undisclosed cases of the crippling disease are discovered across the country, India will no longer be considered to be polio endemic, leaving only Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria on that list. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)

India has postponed its pulse polio programme, scheduled to be held on January 17. While the Union Health Ministry was yet to announce the postponement of the programme, a circular issued by Kerala government to its health workers said that the plan, to be held over three days from January 17, was put off at the instruction of the Health Ministry.

Ironically, two days before the Kerala government circular, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan was urging the State governments to make the oral polio campaign, which gives polio drops to children below five years, a grand success. In fact, he told the State health ministers during a virtual meeting last week that India cannot afford to allow other health intervention programmes such as polio drive cannot suffer because of impending Covid-19 vaccination roll-out.

The Kerala government statement, however, cited the same reason for putting off the polio drive. The polio programme was postponed because it clashed with the Covid-19 vaccine roll-out which is to commence from January 16.

No decision has been taken yet on when to hold polio vaccine drive next.

Published on January 12, 2021 08:06