By Deepak Kapur Ten years ago, India achieved what many thought was an impossible feat. On March 27, 2014, the World Health Organization certified the entire Southeast Asia region, including India, as wild polio-free. This remarkable turnaround changed a nation once considered the epicentre of the debilitating disease into a successful model for global health efforts.

This World Polio Day, a decade after being certified wild polio-free, is fitting to reflect on India's journey and its ongoing fight to maintain its polio-free status. The question to revisit is how India, with its enormous population, managed to eradicate polio. India managed to reach even the most inaccessible communities through improved surveillance techniques, the power of vaccines, community education, micro-planning strategies for routine immunization, and a multi-actor system involving government officials, NGOs, local volunteers, and international organisations.

Now, to continue to keep polio at bay, we must remain vigilant. New Challenges At Home And Abroad In order to safeguard the polio-free status we worked so hard to achieve, India continues to hold yearly national and sub-national immunisation days, making sure every child is protected. India even integrated the injectable Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV) into routine immunisation.

Nevertheless, new challenges abound. For example, the recent detection of two variant poliovirus cases in India has sent ripples through the public health community. Var.