NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Wayne Hearn at (847) 866-3386
Rotary
to commit $75 million to end polio
Funding
announcement to come during special UN General Assembly session to rally
support for global eradication of crippling childhood disease
EVANSTON, Ill. (Sept.
27, 2012) — Rotary
International plans to contribute US $75 million over three years to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative as part of a
worldwide effort to close a $945 million funding gap that threatens to derail
the 24 year-old global health effort, even as new polio cases are at an
all-time low.
Rotary,
which already has contributed $1.2 billion to stop this crippling childhood
disease, will announce its new funding commitment in New York City on Sept. 27
during a special side-event on polio eradication convened by United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon during the 67th Session of the UN
General Assembly.
Secretary-General
Ban, who has made polio eradication a top priority of his second term, is
expected to issue a strong call urging UN member states to ramp up their
support for the polio eradication initiative, launched in 1988 by Rotary, the
World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. The partnership now includes the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation and the United Nations Foundation.
The
New York event will include two panel
sessions which will include remarks by Wilf Wilkinson, chair of The Rotary
Foundation; Bill Gates, co-chair of the Gates Foundation; and top leaders and
heads of state from the remaining polio-endemic countries and key donor countries. The wild poliovirus is now endemic only to
Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Nigeria, although other countries remain at risk for
re-established cases imported from the endemics.
“It
is imperative that governments step up and honor their commitments to polio
eradication if we are to achieve our goal of a polio-free world,” said
Wilkinson. “We are at a true tipping point, with success never closer than it
is right now. We must seize the advantage by acting immediately, or risk
breaking our pledge to the world’s children.”
The
urgency at the UN follows action taken in May by the World Health Assembly,
which declared polio eradication to be a “programmatic emergency for global
public health.” Although new polio cases are at an all-time low – fewer than 140
worldwide so far this year – the $945 million shortfall has already affected
several scheduled immunization activities in polio-affected countries and could
derail the entire program unless the gap is bridged. If eradication fails and
polio rebounds, up to 200,000 children a year could be paralyzed.
Polio
cases have plummeted by more than 99 percent since 1988, when the disease infected
about 350,000 children a year. Fewer than 700 new cases were reported in 2011.
Rotary and its partners have reached more than 2.5 billion children with the
oral polio vaccine, preventing more than five million cases of paralysis and
hundreds of thousands of pediatric deaths.
Rotary’s
chief responsibilities in the initiative are fundraising and advocacy, a role
of increasing importance as the end game draws near. In early September, Rotary
launched a new, interactive website -- endpolionow.org – intended to educate,
activate and inspire visitors to actively support the polio eradication effort.
Visitors are encouraged to sign a petition calling for world leaders to commit
additional resources to close the funding gap. The e-signatures will be
presented to Secretary-General Ban in New York. Site visitors can also estimate
the potential dollar value they can generate by sharing the polio eradication
message through social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter.
Earlier
this year, Rotary raised $228 million in new money for polio eradication in
response to a $355 million challenge grant from the Gates Foundation, which
promptly contributed an additional $50 million in recognition of Rotary’s
commitment.
Rotary is a global
humanitarian organization with more than 1.2 million members in 34,000 Rotary
clubs in over 200 countries and geographical areas. Rotary members are men and
women who are business, professional and community leaders with a shared
commitment to make the world a better place through humanitarian service. To
access broadcast quality video footage and still images of Rotary members
immunizing children against polio available go to: Media Center.
No comments:
Post a Comment