All schools in Upshur County will close at 1 p.m. today. All B-UHS sporting events today are canceled.

Rotary Club of Buckhannon-Upshur receives update on polio eradication progress

Marty Kelley gave an update to the Rotary Club of Buckhannon-Upshur Nov. 15 about Rotary and its efforts to eliminate polio. / Photo by Monica Zalaznik

BUCKHANNON – The Rotary Club has contributed more than $2.1 billion to help eradicate polio.

Marty Kelley gave an update to the Rotary Club of Buckhannon-Upshur Nov. 15 about Rotary and its efforts to eliminate polio.

“I thought I knew everything, but so much has changed and I’m going to try my best to explain it all to you,” Kelley said. “For starters, our October Rotary magazine has an article that is really, really fabulous.”

She said the article talked about cutting-edge research and the case of polio in upstate New York.

“I remember thinking, ‘how could that be?’ because Rotary has been battling polio for 35 years, just members of Rotary have contributed $2.1 billion and that $2.1 billion, so we can be really proud of being Rotarians.”

Kelley explained there are four types of polio and different kinds of vaccines.

“When you talk about polio, it’s not just polio, it’s type one, type two, type three and it could also be called a strain and one more type that is called circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus, so there’s four different viruses,” Kelley said. “Type two and type three have been eradicated, so only type one is out there in the wild and even though type two was eradicated, it is really spreading, and it is in existence because of that circulating vaccine-derived polio.”

The United States and other countries use different forms of the polio vaccine.

“The only type of vaccine the United States has used since the year 2000 is inactivated poliovirus, and it was Dr. Salt’s method of taking care of polio,” Kelley said. “It does kill all three kinds; it has all three kinds of inactivated virus in the thing they put in the arm, and why we all got it, and it’s safe, it cannot cause the circulating virus that we have now.”

Kelley said the vaccine used in the United States is harder to circulate in other countries because it must be delivered via a needle, so these countries use an oral polio vaccine.

“The oral polio vaccine could treat all three of the original viruses, but it uses the live virus, so they take all those little tubes for the little kids, and they just put one drop on their tongue, so it’s easy to administer and that’s why they use it,” Kelley said. “It’s the only thing they can do, however, it causes shedding, so when the virus goes into your body it doesn’t kill that virus. You can shed it through nasal, saliva and you can share it through waste, and that’s a big problem.”

Three-quarters of the people at risk for contracting polio live in areas where things are so dirty, they can’t wash their dishes.

“They can’t do anything about their sanitation, they don’t have toilets, they don’t have sewer systems, water is not sanitized, so the oral vaccine, even though it’s much easier to administer and get out there, it does have that big problem,” Kelley said. “When your body sheds the live virus, a lot of things are contaminated.”

Researchers are investigating a new type of vaccine that will address the type of virus that is being shed so it can’t replicate or mutate another form of the virus.

“We don’t use the kind of vaccine that your body sheds, and we have excellent sanitation, but third world type of countries that is a problem,” Kelley said. “The case we had in New York state, they will not release any names or anything, but that was an individual who just traveled to the United States and brought that mutated virus here.”

Share this story:

Local Businesses

RECENT Stories

Upshur County Sports Calendar

Upshur County sports schedule runs Dec. 29–Jan. 4 with multiple Buckhannon-Upshur basketball games in winter classics and out-of-state tournaments, wrestling entries in Powerade and regional meets, and a Mohawk Invitational swim.

WVWC’s Witt named MEC Women’s Basketball Player of the Week

West Virginia Wesleyan senior Emma Witt and Concord’s Alexis Frazee were named co–MEC Women’s Basketball Players of the Week after Witt’s 30-point double-double and Frazee’s 20.5-point weekly average.

Driver cited after triggering three-vehicle crash on Main Street that damaged police car, hit Buckhannon bank

A Beverly woman allegedly ran a stop sign on Main Street in Buckhannon, causing a Dec. 27 crash that involved three vehicles and struck the First Community Bank building, according to the Upshur County Sheriff’s Department’s wreck report.

Woman extricated after Route 33 crash near Huddle House; truck driver cited

A Salem woman was trapped in her vehicle and had to be extricated after a two-vehicle crash on Route 33 north of the Huddle House. Police say a truck driver attempting to cross lanes to turn left was cited for failing to yield.

Bryan Lynn Fitzgerald

Bryan Lynn Fitzgerald, 68, of French Creek, WV, died December 24, 2025, in Morgantown and is survived by his family, with cremation and private services planned.

On the City of Buckhannon Calendar: Week of Dec. 29, 2025

No regularly scheduled meetings this week. City offices and waste collection closed January 1 for New Year’s Day.

Buckhannon man charged after allegedly breaking into trailer, fighting resident

A Buckhannon man was arrested after allegedly breaking into a home and fighting with one of the occupants. He faces charges including burglary, destruction of property, assault and battery.

Buckhannon woman charged with using elderly man’s bank card online

A Buckhannon woman was arrested after police say she used another person’s bank card information for multiple unauthorized transactions totaling about $1,201.29. She said the transactions were not intentional, and his card might have been saved to her online payments account.

St. Joseph’s Hospital Foundation funds advanced ophthalmology equipment through Lavera Clark Trust

The St. Joseph’s Hospital Foundation purchased new retinal imaging technology that enhances early detection and monitoring of conditions like diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma and macular degeneration.