Rotary Club of Greater Bend Launches Local Campaign to End Polio Now

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(Photo above provided by The Rotary Club of Greater Bend)

In support of an international Rotary effort to eradicate polio, The Rotary Club of Greater Bend has announced a local campaign to raise some $15,000 to support the worldwide effort and is planning the third annual event called Pints for Polio set for April 4 in downtown Bend.

PINTS FOR POLIO
The Pints for Polio event, set for Saturday, April 4 from 2-6pm in downtown Bend, will be a “pub crawl” type event where attendees will get a sampling of local beers from over a dozen Bend pubs and restaurants. Check-in for the event will be at The Summit Saloon, 125 NW Oregon Ave.

Cost is $25 per person and 100 percent of the proceeds from the event will go into the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. Attendees will receive a commemorative pint glass and a punch card good for six ounce beer tastes at over a dozen bend pubs to be used on the day of the event.

Registrations can be made on-line at www.PintsForPolio.org or if you would like to help sponsor the effort contact Cort Vaughn at 541-383-8180 or PintsForPolioBend@gmail.com.

END POLIO NOW
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) is committed to achieving a polio-free world. Rotary is a spearheading partner in the GPEI, along with the World Health Organization, UNICEF and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The goal of the initiative is the global certification of polio eradication.

Local Rotarian and business consultant Cort Vaughan, a polio survivor, is chair of the End Polio Now Rotary Club of Greater Bend campaign. “I spent four months in the hospital at the age of two recovering from Polio,” explained Vaughan. “The disease left my right leg paralyzed below the knee. I do not want another child anywhere to be paralyzed by this horrible disease, which is why I am working with Rotary to immunize every child in the world.”

Rotary Club of Greater Bend has made it a priority for the local club to raise funds to help eradicate polio. Through the work of the GPEI, more than five million people, mainly in the developing world, who would otherwise have been paralyzed, are walking because they have been immunized against polio, and more than 500,000 cases of polio are prevented each year due to the efforts of governments and the GPEI partnership. Transmission of the polio virus has been stopped in all but three countries – Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Pakistan – and the virus is being contained within increasingly smaller geographic areas within those countries.

Vaccinating our families according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended immunization schedules, not only protects our loved ones, but our entire community as well.

LOCAL VACCINATION RATE
Vaughan explains that what that statement means by protecting our community is the concept of herd immunity. “If someone infected with a communicable disease visits our community and only meets people who are immune, then the disease will not spread. If that infected person comes in contact with a susceptible individual, then the disease can spread. That is how epidemics get started. The greater the proportion of individuals that are resistant, the smaller the probability that a susceptible individual will come into contact with an infectious person. In this way unvaccinated people are indirectly protected by vaccinated people.”

Routine childhood vaccinations eradicated Polio in the United States in 1975 and have almost eliminated Whooping Cough, Measles and other diseases that were once common

According to the Oregon Public Health Authority immunization is the safest and most effective public health tool available for preventing disease and death. Thanks to vaccinations, we have not seen or experienced many of the infectious diseases that gripped past generations such as polio, measles, rubella, diphtheria and tetanus.

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