Let's finish the job and end polio: WHO

Let's finish the job and end polio: WHO

UN
24 Oct 2025, 17:30 GMT+

Thirty-five years ago, polio, a highly infectious viral disease, paralysed around 350,000 children per year. Following a UN-led international push, that number is now less than 50.

UN humanitarians reported on Tuesday that aid workers in Gaza supporting local health authorities have now managed to vaccinate nearly 550,000 children under 10 nearly all those it aimed to reach.

Common infections are becoming harder and sometimes impossible to treat, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Monday, as new data show that one in six bacterial infections globally are resistant to standard antibiotics, endangering millions and straining health systems worldwide.

In 1988, the international community united under the World Health Organizations (WHO) leadership with the goal of eradicating polio. World Polio Day, falling on 24 October, raises awareness about the progress made and challenges that remain to end its spread.

Polio can invade the nervous system and cause paralysis, most often in children.

Cases down, but fight must continue

Decades ago, the world overcame geopolitical and geographic barriers to end smallpox. Let's do the same for polio. Let's finish the job, said WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Three decades ago, theGlobal Polio Eradication Initiativewas established and is now led by the WHO and other non-US organizations and governments.

Since the launch of the initiative, the number of polio cases has dropped by more than 99 per cent, with only 36 cases of the virus reported so far in 2025.

Certain regions of the world, however, are still struggling to eradicate polio, and the ones that have succeeded in doing so must continue to support public health authorities in disease monitoring and prevention, WHO says.

Dr. Catharina Boehme who heads the WHO in Southeast Asia called upon member states to recommit to immunisation campaigns and invest in surveillance and health systems.

Together, we can protect every child from polio, everywhere and build a healthier and more resilient future for all, she said.

Gaps in immunisation coverage

While the WHO European region achieved polio-free status in 2002 and has remained free of endemic spread of the virus since then, vaccination coverage in the area decreased in 2024, leaving over 450,000 babies unprotected.

In Afghanistan, a ban on house-to-house immunisation has resulted in over one million children missed in southern areas by polio vaccination campaigns since May 2018, according to the WHOsPolio Eradication Strategy 2022-2026.

As a result, in 2019 and 2020, respectively, 90 per cent and 75 per cent of Afghanistans type 1 polio cases originated in areas not currently accessible for vaccination.

Gaps in immunisation coverage leave children vulnerable and present a health security risk to our region and beyond.

We must not return to a time when polio regularly threatened lives and overwhelmed health systems,saidIhor Perehinets, WHO/Europe regional emergency director.

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