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Mozambique declares polio outbreak linked to Pakistan

Mozambique declares polio outbreak linked to Pakistan
FILE - A baby receives a polio vaccine during the Malawi Polio Vaccination Campaign Launch in Lilongwe, Malawi,   -  
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Thoko Chikondi/Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Mozambique

Health authorities in Mozambique declared a polio outbreak in the country.

The declaration on Wednesday, May 18 follows the confirmation of a child in the country's northeastern Tete province who got paralyzed by the disease, according to the World Health Organization WHO.

The case in Mozambique is the second imported case of polio in southern Africa this year, following a case discovered in Malawi in mid-February.

It is the first case of wild polio in Mozambique since 1992, although cases linked to a mutated virus from the oral vaccine were detected in 2019.

Sequencing indicates that the case in Mozambique is linked to a strain of polio spreading in Pakistan in 2019, similar to the case reported in Malawi earlier this year.

WHO declared Africa free of the wild poliovirus in August 2020 even though numerous countries across the continent have reported outbreaks linked to the vaccine in recent years. There is no difference between the disease caused by the wild virus or the mutated virus from the vaccine.

"The detection of another case of wild poliovirus in Africa is greatly concerning, even if it's unsurprising given the recent outbreak in Malawi.

However, it shows how dangerous this virus is and how quickly it can spread," said Matshidiso Moeti, the World Health Organization's Africa director.

In response to the case in neighbouring Malawi, Mozambique recently carried out two mass vaccination campaigns in which 4.2 million children were vaccinated against the disease, said WHO.

Disease surveillance is being strengthened in five countries: Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Vaccination campaigns in the coming weeks are planned to reach 23 million children aged five years and below.

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