UNICEF
Press release
Friday, July 19, 2013
With the first reported cases of polio in six years, Somalia faces a potentially serious outbreak of the disease amidst a continuing humanitarian crisis.
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© UNICEF Somalia/2013/Holt |
A young girl receives polio vaccination drops at a school in Mogadishu. |
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Faisa Abdullahi, 8 years old, lives in a camp for internally displaced people, where her family moved after their cattle died. She had never been given any vaccinations, and during the last polio outbreak, Faisa contracted the disease. Now she can only walk with the help of her crutches.
She attends school in the camp, a tent that shields the pupils from the elements.
“Sometimes my legs are very sore and I can't stand up,” she says. “I was the only one in my family to get sick like this, but in my school there are three of them who are sick like me. We all have to walk with sticks.”In spite of the challenges, Faisa manages to keep a positive outlook.
“Some of the children are not very nice to us because of this,” she
says. “But they don't understand what it is like to be sore like this.
It is OK though, because my family are nice to me.”
New outbreak
Since the confirmation in May that a 2-year-old girl had contracted
polio – the first reported case in Somalia since 2007 – 66 cases have
been reported, most of them in or around Mogadishu.
That number is expected to rise.
According to experts, with so many children showing symptoms of
paralysis, there may be thousands more carrying the virus who do not
have symptoms but are capable of transmitting it. Most people infected
with the poliovirus are never aware they have been infected. For those
who contract it, there is no cure and little help.
During the last polio outbreak in Somalia, between 2005 and 2007,
there were 228 cases, many of them children from families who were
displaced by conflict or famine and were forced to live in camps in
basic shelters.The conditions today create a similar risk, and
unless measures are taken quickly and comprehensively, the outbreak
could spread not only within Somalia but to neighbouring countries as
well. With the support of UNICEF and the World Health Organization,
Somali authorities have launched emergency vaccination campaigns to
prevent the current outbreak from spreading further.
Some cases have been reported in neighbouring Kenya, an additional
cause for concern, given the extent of cross-border movements.
So far, four vaccination campaigns have been carried out. During the
last round, held earlier this month, children as well as adults in South
Central Zone (which includes Mogadishu) were vaccinated. Many in this
area were never vaccinated and remain at high risk, and therefore it is
hoped these measures will quickly stop poliovirus circulation. In
Somaliland and Puntland, where no cases have been reported so far,
children under age 5 were vaccinated.
In all, 6 million people have been targeted for vaccination. The next
countrywide campaign is planned for 18–21 August for all children under
age 10, with additional campaigns to follow in the next months.