HomeNewsTrendsHealthExplained | Poliovirus detected in sewage water in Kolkata: how worried should we be?

Explained | Poliovirus detected in sewage water in Kolkata: how worried should we be?

Experts say that as the live polio virus is administered through oral polio vaccine among kids under 5 years of age in India, it is not uncommon to sometimes find the pathogen in sewage as it is shed in stools. But it is important to track the type of virus that is leaking in the environment.

June 17, 2022 / 15:09 IST
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Polio is highly infectious and mostly affects children younger than five. There is no cure, and it can only be prevented by immunization. (Representative image)
Polio is highly infectious and mostly affects children younger than five. There is no cure, and it can only be prevented by immunization. (Representative image)

The detection of poliovirus, a pathogen responsible for poliomyelitis, a life-threatening and disabling disease eradicated in India since 2014, in the sewage water in Kolkata hit the headlines this week and alarmed many.

The fear is that the disease may be on its way back into the country. But is this justified or far-fetched? We explain it here.

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What causes poliomyelitis?

Poliomyelitis, often called only polio, is a serious disease caused by the poliovirus. This virus spreads from person to person and is capable of infecting a person’s spinal cord, causing paralysis.