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For information on Rotary's
effort to end polio worldwide, please contact: Vivian Fiore, fiorev@rotaryintl.org
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE

Rotary Raises US
$88,557,000 to Battle Polio
Fundraising Drive Exceeds Campaign Goal
BRISBANE, Australia
/MaximsNews.com/ -- As part of Rotary's 20-year commitment
to end polio by its 100th anniversary in 2005, the humanitarian service organization
announced that its 1.2 million members successfully raised over US $88 million,
surpassing its original goal of US $80 million.
Last year, Rotary embarked on its second major fundraising drive entitled,
"Fulfilling our Promise: Eradicate Polio," to help raise critically
needed resources to purchase oral polio vaccine, and to help cover operational
expenses and poliovirus surveillance.
During the announcement to the more than 16,000
Rotary members gathered in
Brisbane, Australia for Rotary's 94th annual international convention, Bhichai
Rattakul, President of Rotary International said:
"Thanks to the remarkable
commitment and generosity of Rotary members worldwide, we are closer than ever
to wiping out this crippling and deadly disease. Rotary was the first to have
the vision of a polio-free world.
"Today, we are just as committed to this legacy;
our gift to the children of the world."
The funds raised this year are in addition to the
US $500 million Rotary has
committed to polio eradication since 1985, when Rotary launched its first fundraising
drive with the goal of US $120 million.
By the end of that campaign, Rotary more
than doubled its goal and created its PolioPlus program - the largest private-sector
support of a global health initiative ever.
In addition, over one million men
and women of Rotary have volunteered their time and personal resources to help
immunize more than two billion children in 122 countries.
A
highly infectious disease, polio still affects children mainly under the age of
five, in countries located in South Asia and in parts of Africa.
Polio can cause
paralysis and sometimes death. As there is no cure for polio, the best protection
is prevention.
For as little as US .60 cents worth of vaccine, a child can be
protected against this crippling disease for life.
Great strides have been made in polio eradication. In the 1980s, approximately
1,000 children were infected by this crippling disease every day.
In 2002, 1,919
children contracted polio in seven countries (India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Afghanistan,
Niger, Somalia and Egypt), down from the 350,000 cases estimated in 125 countries
in 1988.
The Americas were declared free from polio in 1994, as well as the Western
Pacific region in 2000, and Europe in 2002.
Once eradicated, polio will be the
second disease after smallpox ever to be eliminated worldwide.
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative is spearheaded by the World Health Organization,
Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
To contribute to the
Rotary Polio Eradication Fundraising Campaign please visit, www.rotary.org/foundation/polioplus/donate/information.html
-- 30 --
Copyright 2003 Rotary International
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