Abstract

.While many factors contributed to the successful elimination of polio from India, partnership and coordination mechanisms at multiple levels that have evolved over the years have been an important element. The lessons learned from these partnership and coordination mechanisms among various stakeholders involved in service delivery, surveillance, community mobilization, and governance deserve documentation as a legacy of the program. This article discusses the various processes and techniques adopted to build strong partnerships and coordination mechanisms among stakeholders by optimizing their strengths and using opportunities that lead toward the eradication of polio from India. Secondary data and literature review of relevant reports, papers and documents were adopted as the methodology for developing this research article. The article provides a model conceptual framework for partnerships and applies that framework to the CORE Group Polio Project (CGPP) partnerships in India and the partnerships among stakeholders for polio eradication in India. The learnings and expertise of the CGPP in developing, managing, and nurturing partnerships can be adapted and replicated for elimination or controlling other diseases (especially those that are vaccine-preventable as well as tuberculosis and vector-borne diseases) and for ending preventable child and maternal deaths.

Highlights

  • Eradication of a disease that has plagued mankind from time immemorial is one of the greatest triumphs of public health

  • We describe partnerships at two levels: 1. The CORE Group Polio Project (CGPP) partnership in which international and national non-governmental organizations (NGOs) collaborated together at the country level under the leadership of a secretariat to support polio eradication activities

  • § The CGPP is a consortium of NGOs currently working on polio eradication in eight affected countries: Nigeria, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Kenya, Somalia, India, Afghanistan and Uganda

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Summary

Introduction

Eradication of a disease that has plagued mankind from time immemorial is one of the greatest triumphs of public health. Polio is one of the very few diseases that have the potential to be eradicated because of the following: 1) the poliovirus affects only human beings and there is no animal reservoir, 2) the life span of the virus in the environment is very short, 3) immunity against polio is lifelong, and 4) an effective and low-cost vaccine is available. The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), led by the WHO, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Rotary International, has provided support to governments of polio-affected countries. The type 2 WPV was declared eradicated in 2015.3

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