Story
17 March 2026
Every Drop Counts: Namibia Moves Quickly to Stop Poliovirus Before Paralysis Strikes
WINDHOEK, Namibia in the dusty, sun drenched corridors of Windhoek’s informal settlements and in villages across Namibia, a quiet but urgent mission is underway. It is not a battle fought with weapons, but with tiny lifesaving drops and the trust of communities determined to protect their children.Inside a classroom in Rocky Crest, a bustling neighborhood in Windhoek, the moment appears almost ordinary. A nurse steadies a dropper as a young child tilts their head back. Two drops fall gently onto the child’s tongue. The entire act takes only seconds, yet it protects against a disease that can leave children permanently paralyzed.A young girl swings her feet from a wooden chair while waiting her turn, unaware that the two drops she receives today will help protect her from a virus that once changed the lives of countless families.Behind this simple moment lies a nationwide effort led by Namibia’s Ministry of Health and Social Services (MHSS), supported by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) under a coordinated One United Nations (#OneUN) response to ensure that the poliovirus never reaches a single child in Namibia.For Namibia, acting quickly now means ensuring that a disease once feared by families never returns. A Legacy of Memory, A Future of ProtectionFor many Namibians, the threat of polio is not an abstract concept but a lived memory.At one outreach point, a grandfather watched quietly as his granddaughter received her vaccine drops. He remembered how his own brother had suffered from the disease decades earlier.“History will not repeat itself,” he said softly.This collective memory has become a powerful motivator for parents across Namibia. Families understand that although polio cannot be cured, it is entirely preventable. Trust on the FrontlinesWhile vaccines protect children biologically, the success of the campaign depends just as much on something deeply human: trust.On 27 February 2026, United Nations Resident Coordinator Hopolang Phororo joined monitoring visits with the Ministry of Health and Social Services, WHO, and UNICEF in Windhoek, Khomas region, to observe vaccination activities in informal settlements such as 8ste Laan in Otjomuise, and at schools including Rocky Crest Primary School.The visits revealed the human side of the campaign. Teachers guided health teams through classrooms, caregivers and street vendors asked questions before giving consent, and health workers patiently explained the importance of vaccination.Every dose began with a conversation.“Parents and children are willing, aware and know we are here to help,” said Senior Health Worker Sr. Kapi Rujano, reflecting the confidence communities placed in frontline health teams.Across the country, information travelled through schools, community leaders, radio programmes, cellphones and family networks, helping parents and caregivers understand why multiple vaccination rounds are safe and needed to fully protect children.An Early Warning and a Rapid ResponseThe campaign began with something most people never expected.In October 2025, Namibia’s routine environmental surveillance system detected poliovirus type 2 in a wastewater sample collected at the Ndama sewage pond in Rundu, Kavango East Region. Although no child had developed paralysis, laboratory analysis confirmed that the virus was genetically linked to strains circulating in neighbouring Angola, signaling the risk of cross border transmission.For health authorities, the finding was a critical early warning.Polio spreads mainly through the fecal oral route, particularly in areas where sanitation and hygiene conditions are weak or under pressure. Most infections cause no symptoms, yet the virus can silently circulate until it reaches the individual’s nervous system. According to the World Health Organization, about one in 200 infections leads to irreversible paralysis, and among those affected, five to ten percent may die if breathing muscles are affected.Because there is no cure once paralysis occurs, prevention through vaccination remains the most effective protection.Acting swiftly, the Ministry of Health and Social Services launched a national vaccination response to close immunity gaps before the virus could spread. Two national vaccination rounds were conducted from 26 to 29 January 2026 and 24 to 27 February 2026, targeting every child under the age of ten years regardless of previous vaccination status. The first round alone reached more than 800,000 children, achieving approximately 91 percent national coverage, while the second round achieved 89 percent coverage. Together, these rounds helped strengthen population immunity and protection across communities.The campaign used the novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2), a next generation vaccine designed specifically for responding to outbreaks of circulating vaccine derived poliovirus type 2 and developed to be more genetically stable than earlier vaccines.A Coordinated Response Under One United Nations The speed and scale of Namibia’s response demonstrate the strength of partnership between national leadership and international cooperation.The Ministry of Health and Social Services (MHSS) led the vaccination campaign and coordinated national surveillance systems.The World Health Organization (WHO) provided technical guidance, disease surveillance and operational support to track the virus and ensure the response met international standards.The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) supported vaccine procurement, cold chain logistics and community engagement efforts to ensure vaccines safely reached every child while building public confidence in the campaign.Together, these efforts formed a unified response under the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a global partnership committed to eliminating polio worldwide.“This campaign is about protecting children before they fall ill,” said United Nations Resident Coordinator Hopolang Phororo. “Through strong national leadership and the collective support of the UN system, Namibia is acting quickly to safeguard a polio free future.”Protecting Children Beyond BordersThe genetic link between the virus detected in Namibia and strains circulating in Angola underscored the importance of regional coordination.In February 2026, Namibia and Angola synchronized vaccination efforts in border areas, aiming to interrupt transmission and protect children on both sides of the border.The coordinated effort reflects a core principle of polio eradication. As long as the virus exists anywhere, children everywhere remain at risk. Every Drop CountsPolio has no cure. Once paralysis occurs, the damage is permanent. Yet Namibia’s rapid response demonstrates how science, strong national leadership and community solidarity can work together to stop the virus before tragedy strikes.These efforts contribute to Sustainable Development Goal 3 on Good Health and Well-being, while supporting Namibia’s Sixth National Development Plan (NDP6) and the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework 2025 to 2029.Across Namibia, health workers continue reaching communities while families bring forward their children for vaccination. With every child protected, the country strengthens the wall of immunity that keeps paralysis out of classrooms and homes.And in this collective effort to safeguard the next generation, one truth remains clear.Every drop counts.