Whatever Happened To Polio?

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Whatever Happened To Polio? Exhibit Documents Strides In War Against Polio (NAPSA)—While America’s polio epidemic may seem just a sad bit of history to those under 50, people over that age remember the disease as something very muchto fear. At its peak, in the late 1940s and early ’50s, the disease affected between 13,000 and 20,000 people in the United States each year, many of them children. Thousands died. Many others were permanently paralyzed. It wasn’t until Jonas Salk and then Albert Sabin developed vaccines that the numberof cases dropped. What many Americans of any age may not realize is that, globally, the disease still threatens children in parts of Africa, Asia and the Middle East. To help, Rotary International, one of the world’s largest humanitarian organizations, has set eradicating this crippling and potentially fatal disease worldwide as its top philanthropic goal. To that end, Rotary International has contributed nearly $620 million and countless volun- teer hours to immunize more than 2 billion children in 122 countries. That means, medical experts estimate, 5 million have been spared disability and over 250,000 deaths have been averted while polio cases have been slashed by 99 percent. Global health experts now say it is possible to stop polio if we can halt the spread of the virus in the remaining four polio endemic countries (Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan) from where it can continue to be exported into polio-free areas. In yy eeeLerLbutTeme clLolth g Rotary volunteer immunizes a child against polio in Addis Ababa,Ethiopia. this age of global travel, anyone can comeinto contact with a polio carrier. To help more people understand the extent of the problem and the search for a solution, the “Whatever Happened to Polio?” exhibit, first shown in the Smith- sonian Institution’s National Museum of American History, is now at the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation—the natural spa where Franklin Roosevelt had his polio treated. The Institute is located an hour south of Atlanta, Ga. The exhibit also addresses efforts to make polio only the second disease—after smallpox—to be eradicated. Photos and artifacts highlight the ongoingefforts of Rotary volunteers worldwide, many of whom havetraveled overseas to administer the dropsof the oral polio vaccine to children and have educated families and communities on the importance of having children immunized against polio. To learn more, speak to a Rotarian or visit the Website at www.rotary.org.