Korea NID

A Rotarian from District 3700 (Korea) administers oral polio vaccine to a child at a health camp in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, in November. Photo courtesy of Young Han Kim

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It’s International Women’s Day and I’m celebrating and spreading the news that thousands of women on two continents play a major role in eradicating polio.

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative tells the story of these female vaccinators and front line health care workers in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria.

And they are not working in hospitals or clinics, but in the field, traveling door-to-door, down back alleys to talk to mothers and grandmothers about the benefits of polio vaccine and then giving the vaccine to the children. You can find them on National Immunization Days delivering oral vaccine, giving hand washing, nutritional and other health care information. You can find them holding meetings with parents, particularly mothers, on the benefits of polio eradication.

The numbers are staggering. In India alone, 80-85 percent of the 2.3 million vaccinators at every round of NIDs are female workers. Of the 155,000 people who supervise these women, 70 percent are female. Just think of how wonderful it is that these two million women are working so hard to help their communities. They are trained, they are skilled and they are respected. In places where women are sometimes undervalued this is something to celebrate. As many of you know, India has been polio free for over a year and the World Health Organization has just removed it from the list of endemic countries. Think there’s a connection?

This is an exceptional program and I’d like you to read the story about the Women Vaccinators and tell your friends. Let’s find a way to start a thank you letter to these women.

 
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