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Yesterday, I noted the potential cost savings from immunizing refugees before they enter the
Some 950 refugees were heading for resettlement in the
In all, some 5,000 hours of work were logged by the personnel working on the project, 3,271 doses of polio vaccine were dispensed and 1,050 miles of road were traveled to manage the containment program. No additional cases of polio turned up. Ensuring that this was the case cost
The need for such emergency containment programs would be dramatically reduced, the authors of this report note, if routine immunization of refugees slated for resettlement in the United States was standard policy. Indeed, imagine if one of those refugees infected someone. Containment costs would likely have escalated logarithmically.
Such an episode might also go a long way to stigmatize later refugees and relief programs. And that, in the end, would likely prove the most tragic cost of all.
Found in: Biomedicine, Humans and Life
- CDC International Emerging Infections Program, Kenya, et al. 2008. U.S.-Incurred Costs of Wild Poliovirus Infections in a Camp with U.S.-Bound Refugees --- Kenya, 2006. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 57(March 7):232.

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