ROTARY VS. POLIO: A timeline
This Story is from TRF web page “End Polio Now”, by Don Klug          Feb 3, 2021 Infomercial
Rotary has been working to eradicate polio for more than 35 years. Our goal of ridding the world of this disease is closer than ever. As a founding partner of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, we've reduced polio cases by 99.9 percent since our first project to vaccinate children in the Philippines in 1979.
Rotary members have contributed more than $2.1 billion and countless volunteer hours to protect nearly 3 billion children in 122 countries from this paralyzing disease. Rotary’s advocacy efforts have played a role in decisions by governments to contribute more than $10 billion to the effort.
Today, polio remains endemic only in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But it’s crucial to continue working to keep other countries polio-free. If all eradication efforts stopped today, within 10 years, polio could paralyze as many as 200,000 children each year.
2009 Rotary's overall contribution to the eradication effort nears $800 million. In January, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledges $355 million and issues Rotary a challenge grant of $200 million. This announcement will result in a combined $555 million in support of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.
2011  Rotary welcomes celebrities and other major public figures into a new public awareness campaign and ambassador program called "This Close" to ending polio. Program ambassadors include Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Desmond Tutu, violinist Itzhak Perlman, co-founder of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Bill Gates, Grammy Award-winning singers Angelique Kidjo and Ziggy Marley, and environmentalist Dr. Jane Goodall. Rotary's funding for polio eradication exceeds $1 billion.

2012  India surpasses 1 year without a recorded case of polio and is removed from the list of countries where polio is endemic. Polio remains endemic in just 3 countries. Rotary surpasses its $200 Million Challenge fundraising goal more than 5 months earlier than expected.

2014 India goes 3 full years without a new case caused by the wild poliovirus, and the World Health Organization certifies the South-East Asia region polio-free. Polio cases are down over 99% since 1988.

2019 Nigeria goes 3 full years without a new case caused by the wild poliovirus.

 
2020 The World Health Organization certifies the African region wild polio-free, and certifies the South-East Asia region polio-free. Polio cases are down over 99% since 1988.
February 2020- We left you last February with a story from Pakistan at a busy toll plaza in Kohat, where a three-member Rotary vaccination team is working to vaccinate children as cars and vans screech to a stop on a busy highway.  A van stops and a young child is handed to the vaccinators through one of the rear windows. He is quickly inoculated with two drops of oral polio vaccine. The van speeds off, fading back into the dizzying hum of traffic, as the vaccinators look for the next car and the next child.