CDC panel votes for injected, not oral, polio vaccine
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POLIO QUICK FACTS
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Polio, short for poliomyelitis, is a viral infection that may
lead to paralysis and death. It is caused by three closely
related viruses and is most commonly spread by direct contact
with infected individuals.
A vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk in the 1950s has
virtually eliminated polio from most of the world.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has set a goal of global
eradication of polio by the year 2000.
In 1994, the WHO declared the Americas free of polio. The
last case was reported in Peru in 1991.
In 1995, 78 percent of children around the world had received
at least three doses of polio vaccine in their first year,
and half of the world's youngest children were immunized in
mass vaccination campaigns.
Source: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization
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June 16, 1999
Web posted at: 1:49 p.m. EDT (1749 GMT)
From Medical Correspondent Rhonda Rowland
(CNN) -- A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advisory
panel voted Wednesday to change the way children are vaccinated against polio,
eliminating the use of oral polio vaccine in favor of injections.
The panel recommended oral vaccine be used only in rare circumstances
to be outlined later and said the new rules making injections mandatory should
go into effect on January 1. The panel's recommendations must be approved by CDC officials but are normally accepted without change.
For more than 30 years, children received a series of four oral polio
vaccines during their first five years of life. However, about
eight to 10 children each year develop polio from the oral live-virus vaccine.
To lower the risk of vaccine-associated polio, the CDC officially changed
its polio vaccine schedule guidelines in January 1997. The guidelines, which
were not mandatory, recommended children receive two killed-virus injections
followed by two live-virus oral vaccines.
Despite the change in guidelines, some children continue to contract polio
from the oral vaccine.
Parents of children with vaccine-associated polio urged CDC
officials to eliminate the use of the oral polio vaccine. The new
guidelines, if approved by the CDC, will do that.
Health officials have been reluctant to eliminate the oral polio
vaccine because it is believed to be more effective than the injectable polio
vaccine in fighting wild polio.
Some experts and parents argue there is little need for the oral polio
vaccine since polio has been eradicated in the Americas.
It's expected that polio will be eradicated worldwide by the end of 2000.
RELATED STORIES:
India wages war on polio May 24, 1999
Agency says polio can be wiped out by 2000 May 2, 1998
CDC changes polio-vaccine guidelines for children January 23, 1997
Panel urges changes in polio vaccine June 21, 1996
RELATED SITES:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Polio Prevention and Vaccination Information
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