Zimbabwe has stepped up a wild poliovirus type 1 surveillance and vaccination campaign in the wake of recent outbreaks of the disease in Malawi and Mozambique, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Wednesday.
According to the United Nations agency, Zimbabwean health authorities are on high alert due to the high traffic volume between Zimbabwe and neighbouring Mozambique where cases have been reported recently.
“Recent reported cases in Mozambique, in particular, have put Zimbabwe on very high alert due to high traffic volumes between the two countries,” WHO said.
The report of wild polio virus outbreak in Malawi in February 2022 necessitated Zimbabwe to conduct a detailed polio risk analysis that informed development of a response plan.
“The risk analysis identified sub-national surveillance and routine immunization gaps that put the country at high risk of polio virus importation,” the agency said.
Among other activities to strengthen polio surveillance, the Zimbabwean authorities have intensified the training of health workers on how to detect and handle suspected cases, and have introduced community sensitisation meetings.
There has also been an intensified vaccination campaign targeting children below five years.
The mass vaccination campaign was launched after an outbreak in Malawi in March.
Currently endemic only in Afghanistan and Pakistan, wild poliovirus type 1 is highly infectious and largely affects children younger than five years and can cause life-long paralysis.
JN/APA