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SA trying to lose its polio 'pariah group' status

South Africa is part of a ‘pariah group’ of countries not yet certified polio-free, thanks to weaknesses in our disease surveillance and vaccination programme. But, reports Health-e News, the national Health Department is determined to win back its certificate next month, and launched an immunisation coverage survey last week to investigate the nation’s vaccination rate.

In 1988, the World Health Assembly took a resolution to eradicate polio from the world. At that time, there were 350,000 cases in 125 countries. Last year, there were only 33 cases in three countries – Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. But, the report says, somewhere in the global anti-polio effort, South Africa faltered. After being certified polio-free in 2006, the World Health Organisation (WHO) quietly revoked our status in December 2017 citing problems with our surveillance systems and concerns about our immunisation rates. “Some provinces dropped the ball. Some haven’t appointed the surveillance officers and data capturers,” says Yogan Pillay, deputy director general of health.

The report says, according to the WHO, South Africa is one of only seven African countries that has not been certified not polio-free, including Nigeria where the last African wild type polio case was recorded in 2016.

The main weakness in our surveillance system is that health professionals have not been properly investigating all patients with “acute flaccid paralysis”, one of the key signs of polio. They are supposed to test their faeces for polio.

“Surveillance monitoring to look for cases with acute flaccid paralysis was not meeting targets set by the WHO,” according to Dr Melinda Suchard, who heads the Centre for Vaccines and Immunology at the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD). “The target is for South Africa to find four cases of acute flaccid paralysis per every 100,000 children and investigate them to look for polio. If we are not looking hard enough for polio, we may not find a case if one occurs in South Africa. Not enough cases with neurological weakness were being identified, notified, and investigated with samples sent to the NICD.”

Pillay says in the report that that since we lost our polio-free status, the health minister has put polio surveillance on the agenda of the National Health Council, and the department has also raised the issue in hospital visits. “It is the hospitals, especially the high volumes ones, that we are concerned about because that is where the surveillance of the acute flaccid paralysis cases takes place,” says Pillay. “We are ready to present our documentation again next month to the WHO and I am confident that we will be re-certified polio-free.”

Polio spreads mainly through infected faeces and the WHO also requires countries to be able to do environmental assessments of sewerage, according to Professor Shabir Madhi, head of vaccinology at Wits University. “It is not only wildtype polio that we have to protect against. It is possible for vaccine-derived polio strains to mutate and spread, especially to immune-compromised people,” says Madhi.

Live, modified versions of polio are given to babies at birth and at six weeks to assist them to develop antibodies to fight the virus, the report says. Although there is only a “one in 50m chance” of such transmission happening, according to Madhi, South Africa is not prepared for such cases.

But it is not only the lack of our polio surveillance methods that concerns the WHO, the report says. The Africa Regional Certification Commission, the independent, expert body that monitors polio eradication for the WHO, is also “concerned that South Africa is among the top ten countries contributing to the un/under immunised children globally”.

The WHO and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimate that only 75% of the country’s children are vaccinated – far lower than Health Department estimates. But it has been almost impossible to get accurate figures for how well protected South African children are, which is why the Health Department launched a national immunisation coverage survey three days’ ago.

The report says the survey is being co-ordinated by Madhi, who is also the former head of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases. “We really don’t know how many children are vaccinated,” says Madhi. “The household survey will cover around 9000 households in all 52 health districts, targeting children aged one to two. Where possible, the children’s Road to Health cards will be checked. But if these are not available, we will try to get verbal confirmation of whether children have been immunized,” says Madhi.

The report says he describes the current method of estimating immunisation as “particularly unhelpful” as it involves comparing current Statistics SA population estimates with vaccine orders from the provinces. “The Free State consistently reports immunisation of over 100%, but there are often vaccine shortages in the clinics,” said Madhi.

Results from the three-month survey are expected by September, the report says.

Pillay is excited about the survey and says he spent most of last year raising money for it and persuading his colleagues that it was necessary. “The WHO has asked all countries to do immunisation surveys and this will be our first, post-democracy. It will be able to give us better figures on the immunisation coverage levels in all 52 health districts, and identify the barriers to access.”

But, the report says, the survey is not simply an important measure of our immunisation levels. Vaccinations are one of the most basic and routine activities of clinics, so assessing these is a proxy for whether a clinic is doing its job or not. Research has already shown that the North West and Eastern Cape not delivering.

The report says hopefully the survey will pinpoint district weaknesses. But once again, how will these be fixed when no action is ever taken against provinces that splash money on vanity buys at the expense of basic service delivery.

[link url="https://www.health-e.org.za/2019/03/11/sa-is-not-yet-polio-free/"]Health-e News report[/link]

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