global vaccination priorities: polio’s next

Healthcare worker Sahro Ahmed vaccinates a child against the polio virus as part of a UNICEF immunization campaign in Warder, Somali region, Ethiopia.

global vaccination priorities: polio’s next!

In Brussels on 25 June, Foreign Secretary David Lammy pledged £1.25 billion from the UK to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance for the period of 2026-2030. This commitment will help to protect 500 million children from preventable diseases, saving at least 8 million lives. This pledge is a very welcome contribution to global health efforts. Now, with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) needing additional funding, ministers must focus on polio, a disease that has almost been beaten, but which could come back.

global vaccination efforts save lives. Now, we must now end polio for good

the UK’s support for Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance must be followed by funding for polio eradication

write to David Lammy thanking him for supporting Gavi and asking for additional funding to end polio

UK funding for global health

The successful replenishment of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance in June showed that despite the recent cuts to the UK’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) budget, the UK remains a big supporter of essential vaccination programmes worldwide. This is very welcome!

Now, we want to encourage the Government to continue supporting global health efforts by funding polio eradication over the next two years. The UK has been a key supporter of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) over many years, and must remain committed to ending this debilitating disease. Since 1988, 2.5 billion children have been immunised against polio. Though many countries have declared themselves polio free, it is still endemic (in the environment) in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and there is a risk of it coming back, with new cases of polio being regularly reported around the world in recent years.

how you can make a difference

To ensure polio doesn’t have a resurgence globally after many years of effort, please write to the Foreign Secretary, David Lammy MP, and Development Minister Baroness Chapman, thanking them for their support for Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, but emphasising the risk of a resurgence of polio. The UK Government should invest £50 million to GPEI in 2025 and £50 million in 2026 to contribute to global efforts to ensure a polio-free world.

Contact details:

Foreign Secretary, Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP, and Baroness Chapman, Development Minister, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, King Charles Street, London SW1A 2AH.

Email [email protected]

Earlier this year, a three-year-old girl was paralysed after contracting vaccine-derived polio in a village in Tangayan township, north-eastern Myanmar. Doctors described the case as a sign of the damage done to the country’s healthcare system by four years of civil war, and revealing gaps in vaccination coverage. A spokesperson for GPEI noted that “only a single isolate was confirmed, and at this time there is no evidence of circulation”. It is the first known polio case in Myanmar since 2019.

Read more about this example of the risk of polio resurgence in this article in The Telegraph.