Precautions should be taken against cholera, hepatitis, typhoid and polio throughout the region. |
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To keep your options as open as possible, I'd suggest being vaccinated against yellow fever, hepatitis A, typhoid, tetanus and polio. |
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You should also get vaccinations for typhoid, hepatitis A, polio, malaria and diphtheria. |
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For immunisation against polio three drops of the vaccine are put into the child's mouth, or they may be put on a sugar cube that is then eaten. |
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It provides immunity to polio, as well as diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis and Hib. |
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His mobility was severely affected when he contracted polio at the age of 15, and he is now a wheelchair-user. |
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Currently, parents wanting protection against polio are offered oral vaccinations. |
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Slightly lame in his right leg after suffering from polio, Bruce said the idea really appealed to him. |
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But as the polio campaign has dragged on, the sceptic voices have grown louder. |
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They even dominate the new medium of television, serving as annual hosts of a polio telethon. |
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Some of the most common diseases are malaria, bilharzia, sexually transmitted diseases, tetanus, cholera, polio, and typhoid. |
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Dad has to wear a caliper on his leg because he had polio when he was young. |
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Typical immunisations for a traveller will include a booster for polio and tetanus, and immunisation against hepatitis A and typhoid. |
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When my dad was just a boy he was stricken with polio and forced to stay in a hospital for several years. |
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The immunization level for specific diseases such as polio and measles now surpasses 90 percent. |
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The last thing he and his fellow polio sufferers wanted was to be segregated and treated as people apart, because they were not. |
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That was when whooping cough, measles, mumps, rubella, polio, diphtheria and smallpox were routine. |
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The tests, carried out between 1960 and 1973, involved vaccines for conditions such as rubella, whooping cough, diphtheria, tetanus and polio. |
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Set to come into use in September, the jab will protect babies against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, Hib and polio at two months. |
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In Liberia, the major health issue is infectious diseases, including yellow fever, cholera, typhoid, polio and malaria. |
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They create artificial limbs and calipers for amputees and polio victims, enabling them to live full, normal lives. |
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As of August, polio has claimed eight lives in the country, mostly babies and toddlers. |
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No matter which variation of polio a vaccinated individual comes into contact with, he or she should successfully resist infection. |
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There are few medicines used to treat diseases like malaria, tuberculosis and polio that have patents on them now. |
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She went deaf when she was a baby, before the age of the cochlear implant, as a side effect of polio. |
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Intensive immunization campaigns have resulted in a marked decrease in polio throughout the world. |
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Before immunizations were routine, pediatric wards were full of children in iron lungs who couldn't breathe on their own thanks to polio. |
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He again became ill, with polio, and had to spend several weeks in an iron lung. |
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People always got well except for when children got polio and died or got put in iron lungs, but that was only in summer. |
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Because of vaccine shortages, such diseases as whooping cough, measles, mumps, and even polio have also increased. |
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In India I have grown used to giving lectures on polio and other topics with only a moment's notice and without slides. |
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Diseases that we in the West think are gone, like small pox and polio are still rampant in this country. |
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Unless polio is eliminated in India and Nigeria, global eradication cannot be achieved. |
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One important effect of the polio vaccine is to stimulate the immune system within the gut. |
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Visitors should be vaccinated against tetanus, polio, typhoid, yellow fever and hepatitis A. Stick to bottled water. |
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It was caused by infected African monkeys from Uganda used in developing polio vaccines. |
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Vaccinations are free and compulsory for tuberculosis, diphtheria, polio, yellow fever, and measles, mumps, and rubella. |
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Though both his legs are paralyzed by polio, the 27-year-old sportsman has taken up the challenge bravely. |
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We had no way of telling the difference between rabies encephalitis, polio encephalitis, or other causes of encephalitis. |
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When the eradication initiative was launched in 1988 polio was endemic in 125 countries. |
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The report said international cooperation that helped eradicate polio in all but seven countries was exemplary. |
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In the intervening months the number of new polio cases has exploded, spreading from Kano across Africa's most populous country. |
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If a family member is due to receive their oral polio, they should receive inactivated polio. |
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Some symptoms are like polio, so it was originally thought to be due to a virus. |
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The tactical application of immunization is the only way to eradicate polio. |
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Beyond polio and guinea worm, the current list of potentially eradicable human pathogens is quite short. |
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She suffered polio, double pneumonia and scarlet fever, which rendered her left leg useless. |
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He has also been preparing by becoming inoculated against rabies, polio and typhoid. |
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The first symptoms of polio are fever, sore throat, headache and a stiff neck. |
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People who have abortive polio or nonparalytic polio usually make a full recovery. |
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If polio is stamped out, it will become only the second major human disease to be wiped off the face of the earth. |
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It was the first confirmed case of polio, which mainly affects children under the age of five, in the country for three years. |
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Even in 1958, when she had had polio, she felt it was something of a curiosity and a disease doctors knew little about. |
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It was there, in 1954, that she contracted polio from a patient, becoming the last person in Oxford to get it. |
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Just as we are close to eradicating polio, can the same be said about eliminating lymphatic filariasis? |
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On the other hand, smallpox has been eradicated, sleeping sickness has become rare, and polio and leprosy are under control. |
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There now seems a real prospect that, like smallpox, polio may be eradicated entirely from the world. |
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Pearl can also pluck vivid pictures out of the past of the polio epidemic, or infantile paralysis epidemic, as it was called in her day. |
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Some children died of polio stroke and some others have become handicapped for life. |
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An inactivated polio vaccine will replace live oral polio vaccines for all ages. |
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Patients given vaccines against measles, mumps and rubella, polio, rabies and Japanese encephalitis are not affected. |
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Each round requires vaccinators to get the polio drops into the mouths of 50 million children. |
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Historically, home treatment for paralytic polio and abortive polio with neurological symptoms wasn't sufficient. |
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One of my friends was a bright and beautiful girl who walked with a crutch and a stick as the result of what may have been polio in childhood. |
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The name is usually abbreviated to poliomyelitis, or more commonly, polio. |
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The new polio threat is a major and predictable consequence of war, just like shrapnel injuries and broken families. |
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Soon after it was licensed and introduced in the US, stray cases of polio were observed within the incubation period of its administration to children. |
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The Doctor's harrowing account of the orthopaedic centres for polio and landmine victims was punctuated with the earthy humour of the people he deals with. |
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Either way, part of the tragedy and poignancy of polio is its preferential spread to babies and toddlers. |
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For a decade prior to that the country had been declared free of polio. |
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He has, for example, referred only obliquely to his battle with polio. |
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Child health experts today threw their support behind the new five-in-one jab to protect babies against serious diseases such as whooping cough and polio. |
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The World Health Organization has mounted emergency immunization campaigns for cholera, measles and polio to try to head off the worst effects of these diseases in Darfur. |
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Last year, a polio outbreak in Deir ez-Zor raised concerns throughout the region about the spread of an epidemic. |
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Sandy spent his younger years in India where he suffered from polio. |
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Then Cutter Laboratories in Berkeley, California, made a bad batch of vaccine, and 40,000 children were sickened with polio. |
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On Tuesday, the Department of Health announced two infants had shown symptoms of being infected with polio after taking the orally-administered Sabin vaccine. |
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Malaria, cholera, typhoid and polio are all endemic in the region. |
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Gada Mohammad is a resolute foot soldier in Afghanistan's battle against polio, tramping up remote mountains to search out children and give them their pink vaccine drops. |
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Crowe's character is portrayed as such an impossible underdog that I'm surprised they didn't give him polio or a peg leg, or, better yet, no arms. |
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Mr Baker blames the polio for his appetite for tough challenges. |
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Stricken with polio at six, he lived in the only Brooklyn block with an elevator, in an apartment where a baby grand was the only decent piece of furniture. |
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My hopes for an easy way out quickly vanished when he launched into a list that included hepatitis A, hepatitis B, cholera, tetanus, typhoid, polio, meningitis and malaria. |
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After a while you lay the polio aside and kind of forget about it. |
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Tragically, polio forced her to stop dancing at the height of her career. |
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His medical training at Cambridge University was interrupted by polio. |
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Their marriage had begun to suffer, and memories of the polio ballet loomed over the choreographer, known to be superstitious. |
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He later learned that a simian cytomegalic virus had been found in all of the 11 African green monkeys imported for production of the polio vaccine. |
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A study in Benin failed to show that vaccination for diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, and polio was associated with reduced mortality from other conditions. |
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A balanced diet can lower the risk of infectious diseases and this is apparent in the reduction of diseases such as cholera, diphtheria and polio in England. |
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Occasional outbreaks of German measles, whooping cough, polio, and other contagious diseases prompt public health campaigns to immunize Amish children. |
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Reports of anosmia were also observed in the 1930s when zinc preparations were used in a failed attempt to prevent polio infections. |
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When she began to have trouble breathing, a sign of severe bulbar polio, she was taken by ambulance to another hospital. |
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For the first round, aggregately, 1537 mobile teams had been formed in the three districts assigning the task of polio immunization. |
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Aggregately, 1537 mobile teams have been formed in the three districts assigning the task of polio immunization. |
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He survived a childhood bout of polio in 1773 that left him lame, a condition that was to have a significant effect on his life and writing. |
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HeLa cells were pivotal in developing a vaccine for polio, among other scientific milestones. |
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Poliomyelitis or polio can be caused by three different types of polioviruses. |
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Disability and functional assessment in former polio patients with and without postpolio syndrome. |
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An official quoted the report as saying the current situation in Pakistan is a powder keg that could ignite widespread polio transmission. |
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Flies may carry diseases such as hepatitis A, typhoid, amoebic dysentery and polio. |
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The reason why, EPI technicians and polio immunizers have boycotted participating in anti-polio drive, he added. |
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But as polio sufferers died and newer, more portable respiratory devices were developed, the number of people in iron lungs dwindled. |
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I was told not to go near the other buildings as there were lots of sick patients lying in iron lungs with polio. |
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Officials also worry countries torn by conflict, such as Ukraine, Sudan and the Central African Republic, are rife for polio reinfection. |
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Probation Officer Kenny Wingfield has been diagnosed with polio, neurofibromatosis, two blocked arteries and, yes, multiple sclerosis. |
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Charge a group of 800 homebound polio survivors the 34-cent price of a stamp to get their monthly newsletters. |
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In subsequent decades, WHO largely eradicated polio, river blindness, and leprosy. |
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Contract awarded for anti polio sabin vaccine oral solution type glass or plastic bottle gotero 20 dose. |
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In the 1950s, nobody thought twice about putting polio wards and TB sanitaria out of business. |
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Dr Qadi said adults who do not have any proof that they received a dose of OPV or IPV in childhood should also take a dose of polio vaccine. |
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Film about polio vaccinators in Pakistan who pursue their mission in face of cynicism screened at launch of World Immunisation Week. |
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Yet the CDC estimates that four to five Americans catch polio from the vaccine each year. |
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In 1988, WHO launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative to eradicate polio. |
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The medical device is designed to treat bone fractures and deformities as well as bone defects, dwarfism, polio, rachitism and Blount's disease. |
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The last virologically confirmed polio case due to an indigenous virus was reported in Saudi Arabia on Oct. |
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He said that before the polio eradication initiative, the department of health had eliminated small pox and measles. |
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By 1926, the couple had two children, a daughter Pamela who died of polio in 1944, and a son Peter. |
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Many youngsters in the city have not had the diphtheria, tetanus and polio booster shot needed to fully protect them from the illnesses. |
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Hilary Koprowski, virologist and immunologist, and the inventor of the world's first effective live polio vaccine. |
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The flavonoids quercetin, quercitrin and rutin have all been found to have antiviral effects against coxsackie, Herpes simplex, measles, parainfluenza and polio viruses. |
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In addition, most polio survivors are at an age when cardiovascular disease becomes increasingly more likely even in the absence of postpolio syndrome. |
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Attempts to eradicate polio have been badly hit by opposition from militants in both countries, who say the program is cover to spy on their operations. |
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The infrastructure put in place to deliver polio vaccines there is now being used to increase coverage of routine immunization, like the 5-in-1 pentavalent vaccine. |
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Serkis is utterly convincing as the polio victim who became such an unlikely chart topper with songs such as What A Waste and Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick. |
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No cases of paratyphoid, typhus, Brill's disease, Q fever, tick-borne encephalitis, tetanus, polio, diphtheria, rabies, anthrax, teniasis were registered either. |
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Meanwhile, unidentified motorcyclists threatened a polio vaccinator in the jurisdiction of Mathra Police Station to quit her job other wise face death consequences. |
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And I am grateful that a team of scientists, led by Jonas Salk, developed the first polio vaccine that has led to the elimination of polio in most of our world. |
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A case of polio, contracted while doing undergraduate field work in Mexico, forced Martin to rely on a cane, which restricted but did not end his field work. |
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The polio vaccination program took a body blow last spring when the disease developed in children injected with vaccine from the Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley, Calif. |
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By comparison, almost all two-year-olds in Kirklees and Calderdale had been vaccinated against diptheria, polio, whooping cough, MMR and other childhood diseases. |
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Grief and love are interwoven in the book too, particularly through Canny's best friend, Marli, confined to an iron lung following a polio attack. |
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According to officials in Health Department, the KP government has decided to start provincewide antipolio campaign from September 29 following an increase in polio cases. |
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As a result of his early polio infection, Scott had a pronounced limp. |
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