ATLANTA, Dec. 27
The federal government is taking an inventory of polio strains in labs
around the country as part of an effort to prevent the virus from
accidentally escaping and causing outbreaks once the disease is
eradicated.
When
polio is eradicated, every effort must be made to ensure that wild polio
virus is not similarly transmitted from the laboratory.
CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION
ALL 31,000
institutions that have polio virus stocks including health departments,
hospitals and private companies have until Tuesday to submit a report to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The CDC is also asking labs that no longer need to work with the
virus to destroy any stocks they have.
Slightly more than half of the 31,000 institutions have already
submitted reports. Many have asked for extensions.
Federal officials have said polio could be eradicated worldwide
within two years.
Health officials learned a lesson from what happened with the
smallpox virus. That disease was eradicated from the world in 1977, but less
than a year after the self-congratulatory ceremonies, two smallpox cases
emerged from a lab in the United Kingdom.
When polio is eradicated, every
effort must be made to ensure that wild polio virus is not similarly
transmitted from the laboratory, the CDC said.
Polio, which can cause paralysis and death, is not thought to be as
dangerous as smallpox as a bioterrorist weapon because fewer than 1 percent
of those infected with polio develop symptoms. People around the world also
have been vaccinated against polio for decades.
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But the
heightened focus on smallpox has made health officials much more vigilant
about the polio virus inventory, said Dr. Donald Hopkins, associate
executive director of the Carter Center in Atlanta and a former CDC deputy
director.
There are only 10 countries where polio is endemic, and last year
there were fewer than 500 cases worldwide.
The last U.S. outbreak happened in 1979.
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LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
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YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.