Indian children hospitalized after ingesting hand sanitizer instead of polio drops
New Delhi, India (CNN)At least 12 children have been hospitalized after they were administered hand sanitizer drops instead of oral polio vaccine drops in India's state of Maharashtra.
The
incident occurred Sunday at a primary health center in Yavatmal during
the National Pulse Polio vaccination drive, said Shrikrishna Panchal, a
senior official from Yavatmal District Council.
The incident was brought to light after one of the children complained of uneasiness and vomiting, Panchal told CNN.
All
the children have been admitted to the district's Government Medical
College and are in a stable condition, the official said.
An
inquiry has been ordered against the three healthcare workers,
including a doctor, who was present at the time of the incident, he
added.
On Sunday, India's Ministry of Health and Family Welfare started a three-day pan-India polio vaccination drive.
Polio
was once a common virus. In some young children it can affect the
nerves and cause muscle weakness or paralysis. There is no treatment and
no cure, but getting vaccinated can prevent infection.
In 2014, the World Health Organization certified that India was polio-free after going three years without an endemic case.
Five
years prior, India was home to nearly half the global polio cases and
considered one of the most technically difficult places to eradicate the
disease, because of sanitation challenges and high-density population.
The
eradication of polio in India has been heralded as one of the biggest
achievements in global health efforts, but vaccination programs and
surveillance must continue to prevent outbreaks.
Polio
has been eradicated in Southeast Asia, the Americas, Europe, most of
Australasia and Africa. Wild strains of polio only circulate now in two
countries: Afghanistan and Pakistan.
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