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IAP Policy on Linking Vitamin A to the Pulse Polio Program

There is a proposal to link massive dose Vitamin A prophylaxis with pulse polio immunization in under-five children. The members of the IAP Subspecialty Chapter on Nutrition carefully deliberated the merits and demerits of this proposal. It was opined that:


  1. There is unambiguous evidence of appreciable secular decline in clinical Vitamin A deficiency in under-five children in the country.
  2. Recent data indicates that Vitamin A supplementation in infancy does not have any beneficial effect on growth, morbidity and mortality.
  3. It was felt that linking Vitamin A to the pulse polio program is inappropriate; the routine program should not be destabilized except under exceptional circumstances. Concerns were expressed regarding the difficulties in keeping adequate records of Vitamin A dosing, the distinct possibility of toxicity or side effects due to multiple dosing within 6 months and the negative impact on Vitamin A administration through the routine services as at present. The changed strategy would mean that all nutrition and health workers would have to be instructed to discontinue routine Vitamin A administration and established systems for distribution of Vitamin A supplies would become immobilized. When pulse polio program ceases to exist, reinitiation of routine Vitamin A administration would have obvious implications in terms of retraining, logistics and supplies.
In view of these considerations, the IAP Subspecialty Chapter on Nutrition recommended that the proposal to link Vitamin A administration to pulse polio program should not be adopted. This recommendation has been endorsed as the official Indian Academy of Pediatrics policy on this issue.

Correspondence to: Chairperson, IAP Subspecialty Chapter on Nutrition, Department of Pediatrics, Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi 110 002, India. Email: jiap@ren.nic.in