<p>India has completed three years without polio, a landmark achievement which would pave the way for a polio-free certification from the World Health Organisation (WHO), the health ministry Monday said.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The ministry said 40,000 reporting units, including health facilities, annually report 60,000 cases of paralysis to the polio surveillance network - National Polio Surveillance Project.<br /><br />Each of these cases are followed up and 120,000 stool samples collected from the patients are tested annually in the eight WHO accredited laboratories, according to a release from the health ministry.<br /><br />All these samples have tested negative for polio for the last three consecutive years - strong evidence that India no longer has polio. <br /><br />In addition, sewage samples collected from Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Patna and Punjab have tested negative for polio virus, corroborating India's unprecedented victory over the disease, it said.<br /><br />India has not reported any new case of polio since a two-year-old girl got polio paralysis Jan 13, 2011 in Howrah district of West Bengal.<br /><br />All cases of paralysis reported to the polio surveillance network until Jan 13 this year, have tested negative for polio. <br /><br />India's victory over polio paves the way for a polio-free certification of the South East Asia region of WHO in March end.<br /><br />India reported more than half of the global polio cases until 2009.<br /><br />The country introduced the oral polio vaccine in 1985 in the universal immunisation programme in the backdrop of over 200,000 cases of polio annually.<br /><br />President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad will commemorate the occasion at a special function Tuesday.<br /><br />Representatives of various other partners and donors, and ambassadors of countries, which supported India's fight against polio, are also expected to join the celebration, the release said.</p>
<p>India has completed three years without polio, a landmark achievement which would pave the way for a polio-free certification from the World Health Organisation (WHO), the health ministry Monday said.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The ministry said 40,000 reporting units, including health facilities, annually report 60,000 cases of paralysis to the polio surveillance network - National Polio Surveillance Project.<br /><br />Each of these cases are followed up and 120,000 stool samples collected from the patients are tested annually in the eight WHO accredited laboratories, according to a release from the health ministry.<br /><br />All these samples have tested negative for polio for the last three consecutive years - strong evidence that India no longer has polio. <br /><br />In addition, sewage samples collected from Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Patna and Punjab have tested negative for polio virus, corroborating India's unprecedented victory over the disease, it said.<br /><br />India has not reported any new case of polio since a two-year-old girl got polio paralysis Jan 13, 2011 in Howrah district of West Bengal.<br /><br />All cases of paralysis reported to the polio surveillance network until Jan 13 this year, have tested negative for polio. <br /><br />India's victory over polio paves the way for a polio-free certification of the South East Asia region of WHO in March end.<br /><br />India reported more than half of the global polio cases until 2009.<br /><br />The country introduced the oral polio vaccine in 1985 in the universal immunisation programme in the backdrop of over 200,000 cases of polio annually.<br /><br />President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad will commemorate the occasion at a special function Tuesday.<br /><br />Representatives of various other partners and donors, and ambassadors of countries, which supported India's fight against polio, are also expected to join the celebration, the release said.</p>