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posted by janrinok on Thursday June 28 2018, @01:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the close-is-not-good-enough dept.

The BBC reports that a small outbreak of polio has been confirmed in Papua New Guinea, eighteen years after the disease was declared eradicated in the country.

"We are deeply concerned about this polio case in Papua New Guinea, and the fact that the virus is circulating," said Pascoe Kase, Papua New Guinea's heath secretary.

"Our immediate priority is to respond and prevent more children from being infected."

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said at the end of last week that the same virus that was found in the six-year-old boy was also found in samples taken from two healthy children in the same community, the WHO said. This means the virus is circulating in the community, representing an outbreak, it added. Immediate steps to stop the spread of the highly contagious disease include large-scale immunisation campaigns and strengthening surveillance systems that help detect it early.

Papua New Guinea has not had a case of wild poliovirus since 1996, and the country was certified as polio-free in 2000 along with the rest of the WHO Western Pacific Region.

Today, despite the outbreak, the disease remains endemic only in Nigeria, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, where conspiracy theories about the vaccine (and not all of them are completely unfounded) hamper eradication efforts. Dr. Steven Novella has an article discussing the outbreak in more depth.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:18PM (6 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:18PM (#699802)

    After 30 years [cnn.com]

  • (Score: 5, Informative) by rigrig on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:32PM (2 children)

    by rigrig (5129) <soylentnews@tubul.net> on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:32PM (#699805) Homepage

    Luckily that turned out to be a false alarm [cbslocal.com]

    --
    No one remembers the singer.
    • (Score: 0, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @03:00PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @03:00PM (#699827)

      So how much of that was propaganda?

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 29 2018, @02:06AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 29 2018, @02:06AM (#700079)
        None of it. There really is a sick kid in Venezuela with acute flaccid paralysis (AFP), which can have a number of possible causes, one being polio. But when they examined the child more closely they ruled polio out: "final laboratory analysis received today has confirmed that the AFP symptoms are not associated with wild or vaccine-derived poliovirus." So whatever it is that ails that poor kid, it isn't polio.
  • (Score: 2) by stormwyrm on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:33PM (2 children)

    by stormwyrm (717) on Thursday June 28 2018, @02:33PM (#699807) Journal

    Steve Novella’s article [sciencebasedmedicine.org] links to a more recent report stating that the Venezuela case was a false alarm [cbslocal.com]. It's not polio, whatever it was.

    --
    Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @03:41PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @03:41PM (#699848)

      Was it lupus?

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @05:21PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 28 2018, @05:21PM (#699908)

        It's never lupis