Poliomyelitis

Find most of the information you need in these resources

Always refer to your local signed PGD's in practice, and remember the Green Book takes priority over the SPmC - and sometimes WHO takes priority over the Green Book! They don't always say the same!

Other useful links and further reading:

Find all the government resources here: Guidance, vaccination, data and analysis: The diagnosis, vaccination, management and epidemiology of polio

Polio is a big problem still in other areas of the world. This is a useful website to check out.

Recent Updates & News

9th April 2025: Polio: guidance, vaccination, data and analysis: This page has been updated to include information on the global polio eradication programme, the UK National Authority for Containment, and environmental surveillance.

3rd April 2025: Updated information on the reporting, investigation and management of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) and acute flaccid myelitis (AFM).

30th Jan - article: Europe faces growing risk of polio despite ongoing vaccination efforts

23rd Jan 2025: The School leaver booster (Td/IPV): vaccine coverage estimates are out. It made me quite sad looking at the uptake data, I have to admit. Td/IPV coverage for year 10 students during the 2023/24 was 72.7%, which is 6.8 percentage points lower than the year 10 cohort in 2022/23.

22nd Jan 2025: The routine imms schedule has been updated to reflect a change to the use of REPEVAX rather than Boostrix-IPV at 3 years and 4 months.

10th Jan 2025: As of 10 January 2025, a further vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 (VDPV2) has been detected in an environmental sewage sample from London collected in December 2024.

20th Nov: Sad news for Pakistan (and humankind in general) as they hit their 50th case of polio this year: A 20 month old girl who has been paralysed from something that so easily could have been prevented.

16th August. Sad news. The first case of polio has been confirmed in a 10-month-old child in Gaza. This article later appeared in the news on 30th August: WHO delivers 1.2m polio vaccine doses to Gaza as pauses in fighting agreed. Three-day humanitarian pauses in several areas planned to allow inoculation of more than 640,000 children.

JULY 2024 Updated Td/IPV PGD 10th July.

June 2024 - Adacel (a pertussis containing vaccine without polio- Tdap) is the primary vaccine from July 2024 for pertussis in pregnancy. This JCVI decision came about following studies measuring antibody levels in the infants of mothers who had received pertussis-containing vaccines (dTaP/IPV) in pregnancy. The results showed lower antibody responses to polio (after completion of their primary infant schedule) compared to infants born to unvaccinated mothers, although all remained above the protective threshold. But just to be on the safe side, it makes sense to omit the polio when vaccinating a pregnant woman, especially seeing as there is a vaccine that fits the bill!

MAY 2023 More campaigns! Catch up campaign announced

JUNE 2022 Government alerted to detection of VDPV2 in London sewage samples, some guidance started to get updated in response. Aug 2022 saw the start of a campaign.

APRIL 2016 In some parts of the world, the oral polio vaccine started to contain only one or two strains. Not all three. Read the REALLY small print at the bottom of the incomplete immunisation algorithm. This is the reason why it recommends to disregard any oral polio doses given after April 2016 in other countries.

polio has been around a while
polio has been around a while
Bits and bobs to casually drop into conversation

The history of this one STILL influences clinical decisions today so is worth knowing a bit about!

Did you know....

  • During the early 1950s, there were epidemics of poliomyelitis infections with up to 8000 annual notifications of paralytic poliomyelitis in the UK.

  • Routine immunisation with inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine was introduced in 1956. This was replaced by live attenuated oral polio vaccine in 1962.

  • Following the introduction of polio immunisation, cases fell rapidly (yay for vaccines!).

  • The last outbreak of indigenous poliomyelitis was in the late 1970s.

  • The last case of natural polio infection acquired in the UK was in 1984.

  • Until 2004, OPV was used for routine immunisation in the UK because of the continuing risk of importation of wild virus.

  • Individuals born before 1962 may not have been immunised or may have received a low-potency polio vaccine. The Green Book says: "no opportunity should be missed to immunise them".

polio wards, iron lungspolio wards, iron lungs

Click on the image to see more Polio photos.

This image is courtesy of CDC via immunize.org