You might think polio is a disease of the past, but it's still out there. A new global surveillance report shows that cases of vaccine-derived polioviruses were reported in 39 different countries between January 2023 and June 2024. Vaccine-derived polioviruses are rare strains that can emerge in places with very low vaccination rates, where the weakened virus from the oral vaccine can circulate and change.
The report doesn't tell us how many total cases there were, how sick people got, or whether anyone was paralyzed. It's a surveillance snapshot, not a detailed study of patient outcomes. We don't know the vaccination status of the people affected or what specific communities were hit hardest.
What we do know is that the virus found a way to spread across dozens of countries in an 18-month window. This kind of report acts as a global alert system, showing where the virus is active so health officials can respond. The data itself is limited—it confirms circulation but doesn't measure the scale of the problem or its direct impact on people's health.