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Update: Monterey Pacific purchased a Shelter Box
last year and we have received confirmation
that it was sent to China.
Discover Shelter Box

The US$200 million
funding agreement between Rotary and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation marks
another milestone in Rotary’s 20-year legacy
of polio eradication work.
Rotary,
a volunteer service organization of 1.2
million men and women, made a commitment to
immunize the world’s children against polio
in 1985 and became a spearheading partner in
the Global Polio Eradication Initiative
three years later. The other partners are
the World Health Organization, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
and UNICEF.
Rotary’s primary responsibilities include
fundraising, advocacy, and volunteer
recruitment. To date, Rotary has contributed
nearly $700 million to the eradication
effort, an amount that will grow to more
than $850 million by the time the world is
certified polio-free.
With nearly 33,000 clubs in over 200
countries and geographical areas, Rotary
reaches out to national governments
worldwide to generate crucial financial and
technical support for polio eradication.
Since 1995, the advocacy efforts of Rotary
and its partners have helped raise more than
$3 billion in vital funding from donor
governments.
Rotary clubs also provide “sweat equity” on
the ground in polio-affected communities,
which helps ensure that leaders at all
levels remain focused on the eradication
goal. Over the years, Rotary club members
have volunteered their time and personal
resources to reach more than two billion
children in 122 countries with the oral
polio vaccine.
Thanks to Rotary and its partners, the
number of polio cases has been slashed by
more than 99 percent, preventing five
million instances of childhood paralysis and
250,000 deaths. When Rotary began its
eradication work, polio infected more than
350,000 children annually. In 2007, fewer
than 2,000 cases were reported worldwide.
But the polio cases represented by that
final 1 percent will be the most difficult
and expensive to prevent for a variety of
reasons, including geographical isolation,
worker fatigue, armed conflict, and cultural
barriers.
That’s why it’s so important to generate the
funding needed to finish the job. To ease up
now would be to invite a polio resurgence
that would condemn millions of children to
lifelong paralysis in the years ahead.
The bottom line is this: As long as polio
threatens even one child anywhere in the
world, all children – wherever they live –
remain at risk.
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