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Wheaton Rotary raises more than $10,000 in fight against polio

The Rotary Club of Wheaton has raised more than $10,000 as its contribution to the international humanitarian organization’s successful effort to generate at least $200 million in new funding for to eradicate polio.

The $200 million fundraising milestone, announced at Rotary’s annual International Assembly in San Diego, was reached in response to a $355 million challenge grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. All funds have been earmarked to support polio immunization activities in affected countries where this vaccine-preventable disease continues to paralyze children.

“We’ll celebrate this milestone, but it doesn’t mean that we’ll stop raising money or spreading the word about polio eradication,” Rotary Foundation Trustee John F. Germ told the annual conference of Rotary leaders. “We can’t stop until our entire world is certified as polio-free.”

“In recognition of Rotary’s great work and to inspire Rotarians in the future, the foundation is committing an additional $50 million to extend our partnership,” said Jeff Raikes, chief executive officer of the Gates Foundation. “Rotary started the global fight against polio and continues to set the tone for private fundraising, grass-roots engagement and maintaining polio at the top of the agenda with key policy makers.”

Despite a stagnant global economy, Rotary members not only reached into their own pockets to support the Gates challenge, they engaged their communities in a variety of fundraising projects, such as a fashion show in California that raised $52,000; benefit film screenings in New Zealand and Australia that netted $54,000; and a pledge-supported hike through Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, that brought in $38,000. Many events were planned around Oct. 24, widely observed as World Polio Day.

Bill McGurr, Wheaton Rotary’s End Polio Now chairman, views Rotary’s fundraising efforts as a way to fulfill the organization’s promise of a polio-free world.

“Nearly three decades ago, we made a pledge to end this crippling and potentially fatal disease once and for all. As we stand on the brink of victory, we will do everything within our power to fulfill this promise to the children of the world,” he said.

Over the past three years, the Rotary Club of Wheaton has organized several fundraisers, not only to raise money to eradicate polio, but to raise awareness for this crippling disease.

The club has held a community luncheon with a panel of speakers consisting of polio survivors, an infectious disease physician and a Rotarian who had traveled overseas to vaccinate children on several occasions. The club also has conducted “Pennies for Polio” during Wheaton’s Fourth of July Parade and at Wheaton’s train stations.

Since 1988, the incidence of polio has plummeted by more than 99 percent, from about 350,000 infections annually to fewer than 650 cases reported so far for 2011. The wild poliovirus now remains endemic — meaning its transmission has never been stopped — in only four countries: Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan. However, India on Jan. 13 marked a full calendar year without a case, paving the way for its imminent removal from the endemic list.

But other countries also remain at risk for polio cases imported from the endemic countries. In Africa in 2011, Chad and the Democratic Republic of Congo had significant outbreaks. A small cluster of polio cases in China, which had been polio-free for a decade, also was attributable last year to a virus from Pakistan.

To date, Rotary members worldwide have contributed more than $1 billion toward the eradication of polio, a cause Rotary took on in 1985. In 1988, the World Health Organization, UNICEF and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention joined Rotary as spearheading partners of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.

More recently, the Gates Foundation has become a major supporter. In November 2007, the Gates Foundation gave Rotary a $100 million challenge grant for polio eradication, increasing it to $355 million in 2009. Rotary agreed to raise $200 million in matching funds by June 30, 2012.

Reaching children with the oral polio vaccine in the disease’s remaining strongholds is labor- and resource-intensive due to a host of challenges, including poor infrastructure, geographical isolation, armed conflict and cultural misunderstanding about the eradication campaign.

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