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"You can't forever say you can do it and expect resources to keep coming in," said Scott Barrett, an economist at Columbia University who tracks polio. "Eradication efforts by definition cannot go on indefinitely."
The world is also very different now than when the drive to stamp out polio began. Two of the countries where the virus is spreading -- Pakistan and Afghanistan -- are plagued by conflict which make it nearly impossible to vaccinate enough kids.
Experts had also assumed the polio virus in the vaccine could never spark big outbreaks. They were wrong. Since 2005, a vaccine-derived epidemic has been spreading in Nigeria and similar epidemics are certain to erupt in the future.
"There might be a different assessment today about the feasibility of eradication, but I don't know what that decision might be," said David Heymann, who previously ran WHO's polio program.
Others said that to give up on polio would set a devastating precedent. Smallpox is the only disease ever to have been eradicated, and that took only a decade. Officials are still trying to get rid of guinea worm, and similar plans have been floated for malaria and measles.
Henderson suspects polio targets will be continually pushed back every few years. He said while officials are inching closer to eradication, future surprises could unravel the campaign. "What do you do when you have a tiger by the tail?" he asked.
Ellie Ehrenfeld, who sits on WHO's Advisory Committee for Polio Eradication, said the current situation is encouraging, but has a tinge of deja vu. "We have been very close before, and then things blew up," she said.
If polio is not stopped in the next few years, she said serious questions should be raised about whether the program should be scrapped. "It's theoretically possible to eradicate polio," she said. "Whether or not we can do it is entirely another matter."
[Associated
Press;
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