Polio Eradication Remains Achievable Despite 30% Budget Cut: Health Officials

1 min read

Global health officials said polio eradication remains achievable despite a 30% budget cut, pledging to focus resources on high-risk areas and integrated vaccination efforts.

The budget of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a partnership including the World Health Organisation and the Gates Foundation, will take a 30% cut in 2026 and has a $1.7 billion funding gap up to 2029, the organisation said.

The shortfall is largely driven by a global pullback from foreign aid, led by the United States — which is also withdrawing from the WHO — although its future funding for polio is not yet finalised. Other wealthy donor governments like Germany and the United Kingdom have made cuts, a spokesperson said.

In response, the GPEI partners say they plan to focus more on surveillance and vaccination in areas where there is a high risk of polio transmission.

The GPEI will also collaborate more with other global health programmes like measles campaigns, and use strategies like fractional dosing — where as little as a fifth of a vaccine dose is used to stretch out supplies and cut costs, as studies have shown this still protects children from disease.

Some activities will stop

The partnership will reduce its work in lower-risk areas, unless there are outbreaks, as well as focus on efficiencies.

“The significant reductions in funding… mean that certain activities will simply not happen,” said Jamal Ahmed, WHO director of polio eradication, in a press conference on October 21.

Wiping out the paralysis-causing viral disease has been a global health aim for decades. Despite significant progress due to mass vaccination since 1988, ending the disease has proved challenging: the first missed deadline for doing so was in 2000.

Some infectious disease experts have questioned whether it is possible to eradicate the disease, which often causes no symptoms, making it harder to track the spread. Advocates say that it would be foolhardy to stop when the world is so close, despite challenges like conflict and vaccine hesitancy.

“Eradication remains feasible and is doable,” said Ahmed. “We need everybody to remain committed and ensure that no child is left behind.”

In 2025, there have been 36 cases of wild polio in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the two countries where it remains endemic and where essential activities will continue, the GPEI said.

There have been 149 cases of the vaccine-derived form of the virus this year in countries including Nigeria. Cases of both forms have fallen since 2024.

Vaccine-derived polio can occur when children are immunised with a vaccine containing a weakened version of the live virus. They are protected, but the virus excreted by these children can spread and mutate among an unvaccinated population.

Published in The NEWS on October 22, 2025. 

Previous Story

Jobless Man in Custody for Murdering 2 Daughters in Karachi

Next Story

Punjab’s Broader Push to Strengthen Public Education

Latest from Blog

500 Low-performing Govt Primary Schools Outsourced in KP

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa elementary and Secondary Education Department has outsourced 500 low-performing government primary schools in the province to private partners. In the second phase, another 1,500 such schools will be outsourced and the paperwork has already started on it, officials in the education department told Dawn on condition of anonymity. They said…

Key Education Bodies in Islamabad Being Run Without Permanent Heads

ISLAMABAD: All three major educational organisations in Islamabad, including the Federal Directorate of Education (FDE), the Private Educational Institutions Regulatory Authority (Peira) and the Directorate of Special Education, are being run under interim arrangements. These important organisations currently have no regular heads , leading to a situation that raises questions…

Minor Girl Recovered 48 Hours after Kidnap from Bus Stop in Sahiwal

SAHIWAL: City Police claimed to have recovered an 11-year-old girl 48 hours after she had gone missing from the E-Green Bus Stop at Jogi Chowk while standing with her maternal aunt on April 8. Station House Officer (SHO) Rai Nasir said the girl had allegedly been kidnapped by a woman…

Two Held for Unleashing Dog on Teenage Girl

BAHAWALPUR: The Vehari Daniwal police claimed to have arrested two suspects on April 10 for allegedly unleashing their pet dog on a young girl in the Bhatta Ikram locality the other day. According to a Vehari Police spokesperson, Raashida Bibi claimed in her complaint that Zahoor and Asad unleashed their…

Educating the Poor

JAVED is enrolled in Grade 6 in a government school in his village. Akhtar, Javed’s father, is wondering whether or not he should pull Javed out of school. Akhtar feels Javed is not learning much at school, and that if he is put to work at the nearby auto-repair workshop…
Go toTop