An Indonesian boy gets a polio vaccination in Jakarta, Indonesia, in May. The country is in the midst of a polio outbreak.
Tatan Syuflana, Associated Press
CIKEUSAL, Indonesia Holding her 2-year-old son, Sari listens intently in a ramshackle health clinic as the medical staff assures her and other villagers about the safety of the vaccine being used to fight Indonesia's first polio outbreak in a decade.
But the impoverished mother of two remains unconvinced. She hints she will not participate in Tuesday's nationwide immunization campaign because of unfounded rumors that a neighbor's child contracted polio after being given the oral vaccine earlier this year.
"I'm afraid. Maybe my boy will get paralyzed," said Sari, who was among 62 percent of parents in her village who refused to get their children vaccinated in June during a regional campaign on Java, the main island where most of the nation's 226 polio cases have occurred.
Such fears are threatening the biggest public health exercise ever mounted in Indonesia, whose rising caseload has the World Health Organization worried that the virus could spread throughout Southeast Asia.
Indonesian leaders are pulling out all stops to win over a public skeptical about the drive to vaccinate 24 million children under age 5 on Tuesday and then again on Sept. 27.
The two largest Muslim organizations in the world's most populous Islamic nation are endorsing vaccinations in TV ads, and busloads of soap opera stars and singers are making the rounds to promote a $24 million campaign comparable in preparation to a general election.
More than 750,000 vaccinators will be on hand Tuesday at 245,000 posts set up at health clinics, bus depots, rail stations and airports. The army and police will help deliver vaccine by plane, boat, bicycle and foot to some of Indonesia's 6,000 inhabited islands.
"The biggest challenge is public trust," said UNICEF's Claire Hajaj.
She works on the U.N. agency's global campaign to eradicate polio in the six countries where it remains endemic, as well as in Indonesia and 16 other nations that recently have been re-infected.
"The key is that community fears get addressed and they don't turn into widespread vaccine avoidance," Hajaj said.
A 20-month-old diagnosed with polio in March was the country's first case since 1995. Authorities believe the child caught it from a migrant worker or tourist who was infected in Africa or the Middle East.
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