Polio Case In Côte D’ivoire Could Signal Re-Infection From Nigeria, UN Reports
As the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) today confirmed that a new case of paralytic poliomyelitis has
been reported in Côte d’Ivoire, experts are probing whether that incident is linked to outbreaks in other countries
stemming from the suspension of immunization campaigns in the Nigerian state of Kano in August.
Until now, Côte d’Ivoire had not reported any polio cases since July 2000. If the link to recent regional outbreaks is
confirmed, Côte d’Ivoire would become the eighth previously polio-free country in west and central Africa to become
re-infected due to spreading type 1 poliovirus from northern Nigeria, according to WHO.
Nigeria was forced to suspend polio immunizations in key northern states because of unfounded rumours that the
vaccination was unsafe for girls and young women. The agency is stressing that these concerns are without foundation.
A total of 45 cases linked to northern Nigeria have been confirmed in Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Central African
Republic, Chad, Ghana and Togo.
In response, UN agencies have launched a massive, synchronized polio immunization campaign in 10 countries across west
and central Africa, including Côte d’Ivoire. If high coverage is achieved during this campaign, it could limit the
consequences and minimize the risk of further spread of the virus, WHO said.