Polio virus found in New York City wastewater, suggesting local
transmission
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[August 13, 2022]
By Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) - Health officials identified the virus that causes polio in
New York City's wastewater, suggesting local transmission of the virus,
state authorities said on Friday, urging unvaccinated New Yorkers to get
vaccinated.
"The NYC Heath Department and the New York State Department of Health
have identified poliovirus in sewage in NYC, suggesting local
transmission of the virus," the city's health department said in a
statement on Friday.
"Polio can lead to paralysis and even death. We urge unvaccinated New
Yorkers to get vaccinated now."
The identification comes weeks after a case of polio in an adult was
made public on July 21 in Rockland County, marking the nation's first
confirmed case in nearly 10 years.
Earlier this month, health officials said the virus was found in
wastewater in the New York City suburb a month before health officials
there announced the Rockland County case.
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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) said at the time it was not yet clear whether
the virus was actively spreading in New York or elsewhere in the
United States.
There is no cure for polio, which can cause
irreversible paralysis in some cases, but it can be prevented by a
vaccine made available in 1955.
New York officials have said they are opening vaccine clinics to
help unvaccinated residents get their shots. Inactivated polio
vaccine (IPV) is the only polio vaccine that has been given in the
United States since 2000, according to the CDC. It is given by shot
in the leg or arm, depending on the patient's age.
Polio is often asymptomatic and people can transmit the virus even
when they do not appear sick. But it can produce mild, flu-like
symptoms that can take as long as 30 days to appear, officials said.
It can strike at any age but the majority of those affected are
children aged three and younger.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by David Holmes)
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