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Eradicating Polio

Eradicating Polio: The Last Hurdle

Video from Rotary.org



Health leaders reaffirm commitment to ending polio

RI News: Press Conference June 18, 2008


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Through Foundation grants and programs, Rotarians and other contributors can help change the world. They can finance a well for a village that lacks clean water, improve the environment, or provide scholarships to educate the next generation. The grants and programs available to Rotarians allow them to realize Rotary’s humanitarian mission throughout the world, including its number-one goal of eradicating polio.

PolioPlus has been Rotary's flagship program. Rotary club members will contribute US$600 million and countless volunteer hours to help immunize over two million children against polio. Sprearheading partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative includes the World Health Organization, Rotary International, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, UNICEF and most recently the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

To eradicate polio, Rotarians have mobilized by the hundreds of thousands. They’re working to ensure that children are immunized against this crippling disease and that surveillance is strong despite the poor infrastructure, extreme poverty, and civil strife of many countries. Since the PolioPlus program’s inception in 1985, more than two billion children have received the oral polio vaccine.

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Decades ago, polio outbreaks were a constant threat around the world. After the introduction of polio vaccines by Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin and a steadfast immunization effort, these outbreaks became part of history in most of the world.

Yet many still live under the threat of polio, which is why Rotary and its global partners are committed to reaching every child with the vaccine and ending this disease worldwide.

Major gains have been made in the global fight against polio:

  • In the 1980s, 1,000 children were infected by the disease every day in 125 countries. Today, polio cases have declined by 99 percent, with fewer than two thousand cases reported in 2006.
  • Two billion children have been immunized, five million have been spared disability, and over 250,000 deaths from polio have been prevented.

Polio Plus News

Dr. Robert Scott Helps Our District Raise Big Money to Rid the World of Polio

11/01/08

By Stillwater Sunrise

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Dr. Robert Scott

"Rotary promised the children of the world that we would eradicate polio. We must not forget our promise," Foundation Trustee Chair Robert S. Scott reminded the Rotarians of District 5960 at the Prom Center on Saturday night November 1st, 2008.

Dr. Scott told the over 380 Rotarians that Rotary must make PolioPlus fundraising a priority. He outlined Rotary's US$100 Million Challenge, a three-year fundraising commitment. It is the Foundation’s response to a $100 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, awarded last November, to help the fight of polio eradication. Every dollar given to PolioPlus during the next three years will be allocated to the $100 million match, said Scott.  Rotary currently has raised $38 million of the $100 million.

Using a PowerPoint presentation, Scott showed the audience the tremendous progress Rotary has made to polio eradication since 1985, emphasizing their role to finishing the job. "There is no question, we know how to eradicate polio," he said.

The event is expected to raise $100,000 towards the campaign.

Click here for more images from this wonderful event.

Tag(s): Home  Service Projects  Polio Plus 

Health leaders reaffirm commitment to ending polio

06/18/08

By Rotary International News

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Citing the dramatic decrease in type-1 polio cases in India as an indication that polio can be eradicated, Dr. Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization, announced on 18 June that WHO’s top operational priority is to rid the world of polio.

“This is the best opportunity to finish the job,” Chan said during a joint press conference at the 2008 RI Convention in Los Angeles. “We will be mobilizing within the organization to double our efforts on the ground.”

Also answering questions from the media were WHO’s partners in the global eradication initiative: Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention; Ann Veneman, executive director of UNICEF; and Robert Scott, chair of The Rotary Foundation.

Click here to learn more and watch this very moving press conference - especially at the end.

Tag(s): Home  Service Projects  Polio Plus 

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