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Pakistan's fight to eliminate polio: Number of cases on the rise

Abdullah719

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PESHAWAR: Dozens of protesters stormed inside a hospital in Peshawar's Masho Khel area on Monday and set it on fire after 40 children fell ill allegedly due to reaction of polio vaccine.

TV footages show a large number of people gathered outside the health facility. The news channel reported that the protesters have set the Basic Health Unit (BHU) on fire.

The administration has called in the police for security.

Coordinator EPI Peshawar, Kamran Afridi, denied the allegations that the kids suffered due to vaccine.

Reaction is not possible and the vaccine was not expired, he further added.

A spokesman of Hayatabad Medical Complex told Geo News that the condition of children is not serious. 'They are suffering from nausea and vomiting.'

Afridi said that some parents who refused to get their kids vaccinated are among the protesters.

He stated that something else could have created problems but it cannot be vaccine.

Countrywide campaign

A countrywide campaign to administer anti-polio drops to children under five years of age has started today.

National Coordinator Polio Eradication Programme, Dr Rana Safdar said the anti-polio drive will target 39 million children in all four provinces, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan.

He urged the people to cooperate with polio teams to administer drops to their children against this crippling disease.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/4...-claim-children-fell-ill-due-to-polio-vaccine
 
Polio vaccination drive in Peshawar triggers controversy

A routine polio vaccination drive at schools in Mashokhel, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) on Monday turned controversial after dozens of students were rushed for medical attention because they felt unwell after being administered the vaccine.

While the school administration and the affected parents blame the polio vaccine for the students’ ill-health, officials associated with K-P’s Emergency Operations Centre and other health departments rejected the accusation.

“The anti-polio vaccine is the safest vaccine that has protected millions of children from disabilities. The polio vaccine is administered to millions of children in every polio campaign in the country without any adverse effects,” said EOC Coordinator Capt (retd) Kamran Afridi.
He categorically rejected the news circulated by various media outlets linking the children’s condition with the vaccine.

“It was reported that children from two private schools in Peshawar fell sick due to the polio vaccine but that is not true. The children are in stable condition.”

Afridi clarified that the vaccine stock had been checked by health experts and was found to be safe and effective. “The same vaccine stock was used in other areas too and was found to be completely effective with no adverse effects.”

Meanwhile, reports suggest the administrations of the affected schools had previously refused to allow their students to be vaccinated.

Violent protests

The authorities’ assertion, however, failed to placate the parents and relatives of the affected children. Soon after the news reports started circulating, violent protests broke out in Mashokhel and charged demonstrators ransacked a Basic Health Unit in the area.

They smashed the medical unit’s windows and broke down doors, all the while raising slogans against provincial authorities.

K-P Chief Minister Mehmood Khan also took notice of the issue and ordered officials to submit a comprehensive report at the earliest.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1956381/1-polio-vaccination-drive-peshawar-triggers-controversy/
 
This is what lack of education can do. Vaccines are known to cause minor side effects such as the ones mentioned above. We really need to let people know beforehand.
 
It is just a drama created by a few mullahs who think polio vaccine is haram.
 
That is a very big problem
Here in kpk villages, most molvi is against polio vaccination without any knowledge and they try there best to stop people from it
 
It is just a drama created by a few mullahs who think polio vaccine is haram.

Why Pakistani molvi are like this?
50+ countries are Islamic but our molvies are very different from other countries molas.
 
Why Pakistani molvi are like this?
50+ countries are Islamic but our molvies are very different from other countries molas.

We are a very special nation. Truly one of a kind and a gift to this world.
 
It is just a drama created by a few mullahs who think polio vaccine is haram.

One more thing which I note most times
Why most boys from Pakistani madrassas are so arrogant ( sakht mizaj)?

Most boys from universities become so humble with time but I think most boys from madrassas become more arrogant with time.
 
One more thing which I note most times
Why most boys from Pakistani madrassas are so arrogant ( sakht mizaj)?

Most boys from universities become so humble with time but I think most boys from madrassas become more arrogant with time.

It is quite true. Tableeghis and mullahs tend to be very obnoxious, which has a lot to do with how they consider themselves superiors to other people. They think they are the chosen ones.
 
I remember reading reports a few years ago about how some KPK maulvis were spreading propaganda about polio vaccines containing pig fat and were therefore unIslamic.

They should be forced to come face to face with real polio victims to see the damage they are doing.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">EXPOSED :: Watch how young innocent kids were made to lay down in hospital beds and pretend they’re suffering due to Polio vaccination, to give a wrong message to masses regarding the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Polio</a> campaign; SHAME on such people who’re playing with the future of Pakistan ! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Peshawar?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Peshawar</a> <a href="https://t.co/YxSUz5xMTQ">pic.twitter.com/YxSUz5xMTQ</a></p>— PTI (@PTIofficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTIofficial/status/1120385932673388547?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 22, 2019</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">EXPOSED :: Watch how young innocent kids were made to lay down in hospital beds and pretend they’re suffering due to Polio vaccination, to give a wrong message to masses regarding the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Polio</a> campaign; SHAME on such people who’re playing with the future of Pakistan ! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Peshawar?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Peshawar</a> <a href="https://t.co/YxSUz5xMTQ">pic.twitter.com/YxSUz5xMTQ</a></p>— PTI (@PTIofficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTIofficial/status/1120385932673388547?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 22, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Lol. Why would you make it so bait?
 
Had these people known the side effects they would not have had their kids vaccinated. Then again the culture of these people is such that even if they'd known would still have gone through with it then blamed the hospital and government. It's a wake up call for those who expected IK's government to sort everything out in days. It's gonna take years, most likely our generation would have departed by the time "Naya Pakistan" becomes a reality.
 
Peshawar police arrest man alleging anti-polio vaccines cause children to faint, die

Police in Peshawar arrested a man on Tuesday after he allegedly spread misinformation about the anti-polio vaccine in a series of videos that went viral on social media, a day after hundreds of children in different cities complained of illness and were admitted to hospitals in the midst of a province-wide anti-polio drive.

Videos circulating on Twitter show a resident of Peshawar's Mashokhel area, Nazar Muhammad, in Hayatabad Medical Complex, where children from a school in Badhber were admitted yesterday with complaints of illness following administration of the anti-polio vaccine.

In the video, Nazar alleges that administration of the vaccine causes children to fall unconscious. Then he turns to a group of children standing next to him and orders them to "fall asleep". They then lie down on the hospital bed behind them as if they were unconscious.

When a boy gets up, Nazar tells him to "fall asleep" again, after which he lies down on the bed again.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">EXPOSED :: Watch how young innocent kids were made to lay down in hospital beds and pretend they’re suffering due to Polio vaccination, to give a wrong message to masses regarding the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Polio</a> campaign; SHAME on such people who’re playing with the future of Pakistan ! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Peshawar?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Peshawar</a> <a href="https://t.co/1f6ZWrrOK7">pic.twitter.com/1f6ZWrrOK7</a></p>— PTI KP (Official) (@PTIKPOfficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTIKPOfficial/status/1120388401256194049?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 22, 2019</a></blockquote>
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In another video, Nazar is speaking to reporters outside, surrounded by a crowd of men. He alleges that some children in his video died after being administered the vaccine.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">EXPOSED :: Watch carefully how someone was putting words into his mouth regarding the fake and baseless news of deaths due to <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Polio</a> vaccination.<br><br>InshaAllah, the anti-Polio campaign will continue and we will make Pakistan Polio-Free !<br> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Peshawar?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Peshawar</a> <a href="https://t.co/VplLx8v1Ke">pic.twitter.com/VplLx8v1Ke</a></p>— PTI KP (Official) (@PTIKPOfficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTIKPOfficial/status/1120403940238032896?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 22, 2019</a></blockquote>
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The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Khyber Pakhtunkhwa tweeted the videos with the caption: "EXPOSED: Watch how young innocent kids were made to lay down in hospital beds and pretend they’re suffering due to polio vaccination, to give a wrong message to masses regarding the #polio campaign."

KP and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas have long seen vaccine refusal cases. According to provincial officials and anti-polio campaign documents, suspicion about the vaccine stems from misconceptions about the oral polio vaccine (OPV) which have persisted since 2004, when obscurantist elements and militants in the area spread rumours that certain hormones were deliberately added to the OPV to make Muslim children sterile.


Panic over anti-polio drive

Panic spread across Peshawar yesterday after reports that 75 students at a school in Badhber ─ complaining of headaches, nausea and abdominal pain allegedly after being administered the anti-polio vaccine ─ were admitted to Hayatabad Medical Complex. Shortly after, doctors began releasing them, saying they were in stable condition.

Family members and area residents resorted to agitation in protest against the incident. They broke the doors and windows of a hospital during their protest, set a Basic Health Unit in the area on fire and held polio workers hostage for some time.

Panicked parents continued taking their children to hospitals for checkups till late at night ─ some 300 children visited Lady Reading Hospital ─ and mosques added further grist to the rumours by issuing intermittent warnings over their loudspeakers to not get children vaccinated, and that those who had must reach hospitals to avoid a reaction.

Most children were released after treatment, health workers said. The doctors at LRH said it was psychological whatever it was that was impacting the children. In Charsadda 800 children were hospitalised.

Deputy Superintendent of Police Saddar Sahibzada Sajjad told DawnNewsTV that a first information report (FIR) had been registered at the Badhber police station against identified individuals for setting fire to a Basic Health Unit and causing widespread panic by rumour-mongering.

DSP Sajjad confirmed Nazar Muhammad's arrest and said that further arrests would be made using videos of the protests and vandalism.

Police obtained one-day remand for Nazar from the court today.


KP govt to probe incident

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Health Minister Dr Hisham Inamullah Khan held a press conference in Peshawar last night to debunk the rumours about the vaccine. "We have an inquiry report and the only thing it points towards is panic. The school from where it all started, there should be an investigation against them. These two, three schools had also refused the anti-polio campaign earlier. They did not want drops administered to their students," he claimed.

His claim was echoed by Chief Police Officer Qazi Jalilur Rehman, who had said the issue of alleged reaction from polio vaccines emerged from one school.

The health minister added that a preliminary investigation had revealed there was no issue of the expiry of vaccines. "We are also investigating a batch of vaccines which we procured from an Indonesia-based manufacturing firm. The matter was blown by media out of proportions which swelled to a big crisis but in reality there is nothing to worry as all the children are safe," he said.

The Emergency Operation Centre of KP has formed a committee under the additional deputy commissioner to investigate the issue and submit its findings in 48 hours.

Prime Minister’s Focal Person Babar Bin Atta had said that action would be taken against those who created the rumours to damage the polio vaccination campaign.

"Panic was created to jeopardise polio vaccination as part of a campaign and to put our children at risk of diseases. It is a criminal act and perpetrators will be held accountable. There were no instances of diarrhoea or skin rashes on affected children," he explained.

He pledged that the vaccination drive would continue till polio was completely eradicated from the country. "The WHO-appro*ved OPV used for eradication of poliovirus worldwide is safe for children and parents must have it administered to their children."

https://www.dawn.com/news/1477890/p...ti-polio-vaccines-cause-children-to-faint-die
 
I don't know what is being done to explain and educate the ignorant people about how these vaccination works. I think besides forcing and punishing people for not allowing vaccination, a proper educational workshop for the parents should be part of the program.
 
I had a teacher in university who was going on about how vaccination was a big propoganda and how we should not get it.

I was probably the only one arguing about polio and that teacher went on to say why these problems didnt exist in our ancestors why are these problems existing now.
The rest of the class were also in support of the teachers view.

At the end i asked a simple question from the teacher. Whether his children were vaccinated or not. He said they were vaccinated as he couldnt take a risk.

After that he changed his argument to getting vaccination from hospitals and not from those door to door people.

So forget villagers even educated people have such views and are promoting them
 
13,000 parents in Punjab refuse polio drops for children

LAHORE: Following the polio drama in Peshawar, more than 13,000 parents have denied administering anti-polio drops to their children in the drive against this crippling disease, in Punjab on Wednesday.

According to Coordinator Emergency Centres for Polio Elevation Program Salman Ghani, the anti-polio drive has suffered serious blow in the province as thousands of parents have refused to administer anti-polio drops to their children across Punjab, in the wake of Peshawar Polio drama.

Peshawar was gripped in a panic Monday morning as rumours spread like a wildfire that the anti-polio vaccine had caused children to fall ill and faint in several areas of the city.

On the first day of the campaign, 13million children were administered anti-polio drops, while several refrains and denied the teams following the rumours of Peshawar.

Detailing the number of the parents who denied vaccinating their children during anti-polio campaign city wise, Salman Ghani said 5,600 parents said “no” to polio teams in Rawalpindi.

In Lahore and Attock, 600 and 500 parents refused to anti-polio teams, who visited them for administering anti-polio drops to their children.

“The children who were left in the campaign will be administered anti-polio drops in next phase”, Ghani said and urged parents not to take rumours seriously and get their children administered anti-polio drops to save them from the crippling disease of polio.

https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2019/04/24/13000-parents-in-punjab-refuse-polio-drops-for-children/
 
One more thing which I note most times
Why most boys from Pakistani madrassas are so arrogant ( sakht mizaj)?

Most boys from universities become so humble with time but I think most boys from madrassas become more arrogant with time.

This post reeks of generalization.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعون<br>Tragedy close to Pakistan Afghanistan border as one brave lady of our polio team martyred in an attack on Polio Team in SultanZai (Chamman - Balochistan). InshaAllah we wont rest until the culprits are arrested.</p>— Babar Atta (@babarbinatta) <a href="https://twitter.com/babarbinatta/status/1121333214688239616?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 25, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Following rumours, refusals to vaccinate children against polio rise by 85pc in KP

Instances of parents' refusal to allow health workers to administer anti-polio drops to their children rose by 85 per cent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa after rumours pertaining to the authenticity of the vaccine provoked hysteria across the province, Dr Ejaz, an official of KP's Emergency Operation Centre (EOC) for polio said on Friday.

Across KP, more than 700,000 families refused to vaccinate children, whereas in the last anti-polio drive — which was held last month — the number of refusal cases was 57,000, Dr Ejaz said. He attributed the alarming increase in the number of refusal cases to rumours spread against the vaccine that is administered to prevent the virus.

In Peshawar alone, the number of refusal cases rose by 79pc as about 164,000 out of 800,000 families refused to allow health workers to administer anti-polio drops to their children, he said. Due to prevailing rumours against the vaccine, anti-polio campaign had to be postponed in 24 union councils of Peshawar.

"This is the highest number of refusal cases reported in an anti-polio campaign," Dr Ejaz said.

"The propaganda against [anti-polio] vaccines created panic in Peshawar and other districts [of KP] and has badly affected the efforts of the government to eradicate polio," he said, adding that the EOC will come up with a new strategy before initiating another anti-polio campaign, which will be held in June. He regretted that the rumours have exposed children to the risk of becoming victims of the crippling polio virus.

Dr Ejaz said that the EOC will take local and religious leaders, as well as members of the civil society, on board in order to allay the fear and misconceptions of parents regarding the vaccine.

Panic over rumours against anti-polio vaccine

Panic spread across Peshawar earlier this week after reports that 75 students at a school in Badhber ─ complaining of headaches, nausea and abdominal pain allegedly after being administered the anti-polio vaccine ─ were admitted to Hayatabad Medical Complex. Shortly after, doctors began releasing them, saying they were in stable condition.

Panicked parents continued taking their children to hospitals for checkups till late at night ─ some 300 children visited Lady Reading Hospital ─ and mosques added further grist to the rumours by issuing intermittent warnings over their loudspeakers to not get children vaccinated, and that those who had must reach hospitals to avoid a reaction.

Most children were released after treatment, health workers said. The doctors at LRH said it was psychological whatever it was that was impacting the children. In Charsadda 800 children were hospitalised.

Family members and area residents resorted to agitation in protest against the incident. They broke the doors and windows of a hospital during their protest, set a Basic Health Unit in the area on fire and held polio workers hostage for some time.

Deputy Superintendent of Police Saddar Sahibzada Sajjad told DawnNewsTV that a first information report (FIR) had been registered at the Badhber police station against identified individuals for setting fire to a Basic Health Unit and causing widespread panic by rumour-mongering.

Addressing the hysteria across the province, KP Health Minister Dr Hisham Inamullah Khan held a press conference to debunk the rumours about the vaccine. "We have an inquiry report and the only thing it points towards is panic. The school from where it all started, there should be an investigation against them. These two, three schools had also refused the anti-polio campaign earlier. They did not want drops administered to their students," he claimed.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1478555/f...ate-children-against-polio-rise-by-85pc-in-kp
 
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LAHORE: Amid serious security threats and increasing attacks on polio workers in different parts of the country, the federal government has suspended the anti-polio campaign “for an indefinite period”.

And for the first time in the history of Pakistan, the government has also suspended the post-campaign evaluation — Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS).

The National Emergency Opera*tion Centre (EOC) for polio, Islam*abad, issued a red alert to all the provinces on Friday, directing them to stop the anti-polio campa*ign all over the country to protect 270,000 polio field staff from attacks.

The nationwide campaign was launched in all districts of the country on April 22 and Friday was the last catch-up day.

Post-campaign evaluation has also been deferred as a large number of children were missed during the drive ending on Friday

“After the Peshawar incident, the uncertain and threatening situation for the frontline polio workers has emerged and we need to save the programme from a further major damage,” reads the alert issued by the EOC.

It says that it has been unanimously decided by the national technical team and Global Polio Eradication Initiative (SPEI) partners to call off the catch-up activities of April National Immunisation Day campaign across the country with immediate effect.

“Hence, no further vaccination or catch-up activity will be conducted in any area for this campaign,” said the EOC in the letter.

An official said that the World Health Organisation had been using the LQAS as new sampling methodology under the GPEI to document status of anti-polio coverage and areas of weak coverage with statistical reliability.

He said the national anti-polio programme had suffered a major setback due to frequent attacks on polio teams in different parts of the country, prompting the federal government to suspend LQAS activities as well.

He said the action was taken in the wake of the Peshawar incident in which a violent mob torched a government health facility and the murder of a woman polio worker in Chaman, besides attacks on staff in Sindh, Balochistan and Punjab in recent days.

The EOC in a separate official letter addressed to all the provinces conveyed apprehension about increasing attacks on polio workers, directing them to suspend LQAS activities.

The letter reads, “It has been decided by the National EOC that no post campaign evaluation (LQAS) will be conducted anywhere in the country.”

The official said the EOC had acted due to fear of pathetic vaccination coverage of 40 million targeted children across the country because of security threats and attacks on polio workers.

In Punjab alone, he said, it was for the first time that 700,000 children were either missed or their families refused to get their children vaccinated, putting lives of too many children at risk of contracting the crippling disease, during the last four days of the drive which started on April 22.

The status of unvaccinated children in such a large number may create embarrassment for Pakistan as the Technical Advisory Group under the GPEI is scheduled to visit the country in coming weeks.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1478637/polio-drive-suspended-across-country-after-spike-in-attacks
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Excellent to see this. Clearly the govt is serious about clamping down on anti polio vaccine lies <a href="https://t.co/NJZ0pftxMu">pic.twitter.com/NJZ0pftxMu</a></p>— Zarrar Khuhro (@ZarrarKhuhro) <a href="https://twitter.com/ZarrarKhuhro/status/1126806004275007488?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 10, 2019</a></blockquote>
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I wonder if translating this video in Urdu might help.


Perhaps a basic education and understanding of how our body works and fights diseases might be a necessary perquisite to fully grasp the message of the video.

Besides guns and bodyguards the Polio teams need to be armed with easy to follow informational pamphlets to help the population understand what's going on and that they aren't being given some magical or poisonous drops.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">EXPOSED :: Watch how young innocent kids were made to lay down in hospital beds and pretend they’re suffering due to Polio vaccination, to give a wrong message to masses regarding the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Polio</a> campaign; SHAME on such people who’re playing with the future of Pakistan ! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Peshawar?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Peshawar</a> <a href="https://t.co/YxSUz5xMTQ">pic.twitter.com/YxSUz5xMTQ</a></p>— PTI (@PTIofficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTIofficial/status/1120385932673388547?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 22, 2019</a></blockquote>
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What a meme
 
I had a teacher in university who was going on about how vaccination was a big propoganda and how we should not get it.

I was probably the only one arguing about polio and that teacher went on to say why these problems didnt exist in our ancestors why are these problems existing now.
The rest of the class were also in support of the teachers view.

At the end i asked a simple question from the teacher. Whether his children were vaccinated or not. He said they were vaccinated as he couldnt take a risk.

After that he changed his argument to getting vaccination from hospitals and not from those door to door people.

So forget villagers even educated people have such views and are promoting them

I am taken aback by this story.

It once agains shows that the "educated" people in Pakistan hardly are aware of their responsibilities towards the rest of the "uneducated" population and even worse don't really seem to be educated at all. If a person with such an ignorant and hypocritical approach to life can become a teacher of a university then a lot needs to be done to improve the standard of education. At the very least their should be a system where one could report such a teacher and have him expelled for polluting young minds.

At least you asked a smart question to expose his hypocrisy.

However he is still spewing damaging views. I am glad I got vaccinated by one of "those door to door people" in my childhood days back in Pakistan. How many percentage of the population are lucky enough to have access to a properly managed medical facility. The "door to door people" shouldn't be any less credible or effective than a hospital if they are able to prove their authenticity.
 
You can lead a horse to water but can't make it drink.

Likewise you can't use force to make people do things for their own good instead you first need to expose their false believes and irrational fear. How can we only point to maulvi and make him the scapegoat when even the educated among us cant think properly. The Maulvi and other ignorant elements in the society can only do damage and fool the population because we allow it. We allow it by not having proper answers and rebuttal of their ignorant claims. We allow by not having our own educational campaign. The very best we have is self-righteous indignation and sarcastic remarks to put the other party down.

It's time to be proactive. Besides watching and sharing Hollywood films we need to translate the following documentary in Urdu and spread it among the masses. It shows how Polio epidemic effected the USA which then eventually led to the creation of its vaccination.


After showing the documentary we need to ask the people how come the Polio epidemic is extinct in the West? Is it because Allah accepted their prayers over ours even though they don't pray to him while we do? Or is it because through knowledge humans understood how diseases work and established means to fight them off.

Another video on vaccination and how helpful they are


We shouldn't be supporting vaccination because that's what "West" tells us to do or it's embarrassing and backwards minded if we don't do so.

We should support it because we have a basic understanding of how it works, have seen how it helped mankind and want genuinely good health for our people and care about their well-being
 
Another video since i could only share 2 in one post:



There is already a lot of good stuff readily available all we and Pakistani govt needs to do is translate it in local language and spread it in a proper and well thought out way.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Orya Maqbool Jan’s video on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#polio</a> has been flagged as propaganda content by YouTube and finally blocked. <a href="https://t.co/iHEM11N1Lh">pic.twitter.com/iHEM11N1Lh</a></p>— Iftikhar Firdous (@IftikharFirdous) <a href="https://twitter.com/IftikharFirdous/status/1130878988233191424?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 21, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Anti-polio propaganda

THE effects of the harmful rumours that spread like wildfire during the anti-polio vaccination campaign a few months ago are really being felt now. With five new cases reported in KP, the total number of polio patients in the country has climbed to 53 — already higher than the figure that was expected to be announced at the end of this year. While polio has been eliminated in other parts of the world, Pakistan has the misfortune of being one of only three countries that still contains the virus; the other two being Nigeria and Afghanistan. But Nigeria is now on its way to being declared polio-free, while Pakistan is still struggling.

When in 2017, the country counted its lowest number of polio cases, there was great optimism that Pakistan too was on the verge of being declared free from the virus once and for all. Now, it is becoming increasingly apparent that this battle will continue for a much longer period. And in order to be successful, it has to be waged alongside the struggle against anti-vaccine misinformation, disinformation and outright lies that are exacerbated with greater access to modern technology.

The vast majority of all polio cases exist in KP, which has recorded a total of 41 cases this year. Meanwhile, Punjab has five cases, including three from Lahore; Balochistan has four; and Sindh has three. In 2018, eight cases of polio were recorded in KP. In contrast, Balochistan had three cases; Sindh had one; and Punjab had none. The sudden increase is largely being blamed on vaccine refusal by parents after widespread anti-vaccine propaganda was disseminated through social media, even by some mainstream media outlets, which strengthened the falsehood that polio was damaging for childrens’ health, or part of a Western conspiracy against Muslims.

After students in Badhber complained about feeling sick on being administered polio drops (the episode proved to be a hoax) during a province-wide vaccination campaign in April, there was an 85pc rise in vaccine refusals across KP. So, along with vaccination efforts on ground, there must be an aggressive countrywide campaign to counter these harmful myths. While the authorities have made some efforts in this regard, much more needs to be done, and action must be taken against those who propagate such nonsense as it has cost this country heavily.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1498745
 
There are apparently only 3 countries left in the world with polio - Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. We need them to eradicate it too, true global immunity can only be achieved if there are no more cases in the world.

I hope IK also tweets about this.
 
There are apparently only 3 countries left in the world with polio - Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. We need them to eradicate it too, true global immunity can only be achieved if there are no more cases in the world.

I hope IK also tweets about this.

I hope you understand that he has many issues to deal with and he will prioritize them accordingly. He will continue to highlight injustices as he deems fit.
 
There are apparently only 3 countries left in the world with polio - Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. We need them to eradicate it too, true global immunity can only be achieved if there are no more cases in the world.

I hope IK also tweets about this.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Our government is fully committed to ending polio in Pakistan. On <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/WorldPolioDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#WorldPolioDay</a>, I am confident, together with our people, we will achieve a safer, healthier and polio-free Pakistan for our children.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1054915117996036096?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 24, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As the nationwide campaign against polio begins across Pakistan, I call on the nation to step forward, take responsibility and make Pakistan <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/polio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#polio</a>-free. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PakFightsPolio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PakFightsPolio</a></p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1072011613291597824?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 10, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Irfan is one of 260,000 heroes who reach out to children with polio vaccines in extreme weather conditions. His viral video has left every individual with a sense of awe & pride. This dedication is what will enable us to achieve our goal of a polio free nation <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SalamPolioWorker?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SalamPolioWorker</a> <a href="https://t.co/4wPBxIDUDz">pic.twitter.com/4wPBxIDUDz</a></p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1090849562653126656?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 31, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Plenty of other tweets about it.
 
'Major milestone': Africa on brink of eliminating polio

Africa is on the verge of being declared polio free, after three years without any recorded cases of the disease, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Nigeria marked three years without a wild polio case on Wednesday, a “major milestone”. If no more incidences emerge in the next few months, Africa could officially be declared polio free in 2020. The last case was recorded in Borno state in August 2016.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-...ilestone-africa-on-brink-of-eliminating-polio

______________________

So just Afghanistan and Pakistan left. Such a shame that we have jaahils trying to obstruct this fight in Pakistan.
 
Great news. Happy for Africa.

Africa has so much resources and so much potential. They just need to manage everything well.
 
Two polio cases confirmed in Karachi, South Waziristan

Pakistan’s troubles in eradicating the poliovirus show no signs of abating as two more cases were confirmed in the country on Sunday.

Officials associated with the country’s polio eradication programme confirmed one new case in Karachi, Sindh, and one in South Waziristan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (K-P).

Both cases, the officials said, were children from families that had refused vaccination.
In Karachi, an 8-month-old baby girl from an Afghan refugee family was found to be a carrier of the virus. The case was confirmed in the city’s Orangi Town area.

The other new case is a 10-month-old child reported in Ladha, South Waziristan. The boy’s family had also previously lived in Dera Ismail Khan.

The total number of polio cases in Pakistan this year now stands at 62, of which 46 have been reported in K-P.

Polio campaign officials have repeatedly requested all parents to not pay any heed to the continuing false and negative propaganda against the polio vaccine.

“Refusal and fake marking of children are the major reasons for the increasing number of cases reported in Pakistan. Vaccination is essential for us to safeguard the future of our children and every Pakistani has to play their part in this mission,” read a statement issued on the latest polio immunisation campaign.

Pakistan is one of just three countries in the world, along with Afghanistan and Nigeria, that have endemic polio, a once-common childhood virus that can cause paralysis or death.

The country’s success follows an intense programme based around vaccinating vulnerable children.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), polio has been all but wiped out across the world following a sustained vaccination campaign, with only 22 cases reported in 2017 against more than 350,000 in 1988.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2052282/1-two-polio-cases-confirmed-karachi-south-waziristan/
 
Two polio cases confirmed in Karachi, South Waziristan

Pakistan’s troubles in eradicating the poliovirus show no signs of abating as two more cases were confirmed in the country on Sunday.

Officials associated with the country’s polio eradication programme confirmed one new case in Karachi, Sindh, and one in South Waziristan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (K-P).

Both cases, the officials said, were children from families that had refused vaccination.
In Karachi, an 8-month-old baby girl from an Afghan refugee family was found to be a carrier of the virus. The case was confirmed in the city’s Orangi Town area.

The other new case is a 10-month-old child reported in Ladha, South Waziristan. The boy’s family had also previously lived in Dera Ismail Khan.

The total number of polio cases in Pakistan this year now stands at 62, of which 46 have been reported in K-P.

Polio campaign officials have repeatedly requested all parents to not pay any heed to the continuing false and negative propaganda against the polio vaccine.

“Refusal and fake marking of children are the major reasons for the increasing number of cases reported in Pakistan. Vaccination is essential for us to safeguard the future of our children and every Pakistani has to play their part in this mission,” read a statement issued on the latest polio immunisation campaign.

Pakistan is one of just three countries in the world, along with Afghanistan and Nigeria, that have endemic polio, a once-common childhood virus that can cause paralysis or death.

The country’s success follows an intense programme based around vaccinating vulnerable children.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), polio has been all but wiped out across the world following a sustained vaccination campaign, with only 22 cases reported in 2017 against more than 350,000 in 1988.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2052282/1-two-polio-cases-confirmed-karachi-south-waziristan/

i think someone should go do an interview with that jahil family who have destroyed the life of their kid because of their own jahiliat.

Promoters of anti vaccine are the biggest hypocrites. They themselves make sure they are vaccinated
 
Refusal of polio vaccine should be criminalised. Mullahs brainwash the masses into believing that polio vaccine is a conspiracy by the west to sterilise Muslim children.
 
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Lakki Marwat district on Sunday reported two new cases of polio and Balochistan's Harnai district reported one, bringing the country's total this year to 76.

The two victims from Lakki Marwat — a seven-year-old girl and a 21-month-old boy — are residents of the Sarai Naurang tehsil, a report released by the Emergency Operation Centre said.

According to the EOC, both affected children had not been administered the polio vaccine.

The presence of a polio virus in their systems was confirmed via a stool test. The total number of cases across the province now number 56.

The EOC report cited "refusals by parents" as the top reason for the scale of the virus' resurgence witnessed this year.

EOC Coordinator Abdul Basit said that the polio drops "are completely safe" and urged parents to pay no heed to the "misleading propaganda" aimed at discouraging the administering of the drops.

He said that despite the challenges being faced, the government is determined to continue its fight for the complete eradication of polio.

For this, reaching each and every child is compulsory, said Basit. "And cooperation from parents and all sections of society is mandatory."

In Balochistan, the victim is an 11-month-old boy from district Harnai, who "developed a fever on September 25", a report from the province's EOC said.

The boy was taken to a medical store at Shahrug Harnai, where he was "given an I/M Injection", said the report.

"As the condition of the child did not improve, he was taken to another informal health care provider, where he was given medication," it added.

The report further said that on the morning of September 27, the child "developed weakness initially in the left leg followed by the right leg" and was taken to the Saeed Hospital in Kuchlak, Quetta, where he was administered antibiotics intravenously.

"As the condition still did not improve, he was taken to Tariq Clinic in Kuchlak, Quetta on October 2, where he was reported as an AFP (acute flaccid paralysis) case," according to the EOC report.

The child had been immunised once during a routine drive. However, the family was constantly on the move between Ziarat and Harnai, the EOC observed in its report.

A province-wide break up of cases as on October 20, is given below:

Total polio cases in Pakistan (2019) = 76

(WPV1 Confirmed Cases):

In 2017 polio cases n=8
In 2018 polio cases n=12
In 2019 polio cases n=76
Details of cases in 2019

Baluchistan (7)

District Qila Abdullah: 3
District Jaffarabad: 2
Harnai: 1
District Quetta: 1
Punjab (5)

District Lahore (city): 4
District Jhelum: 1
Sindh (8)

District Hyderabad: 2
Karachi: 4
District Larkana: 1
Jamshoro: 1
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (56)

District Bannu: 23
District Charsadda: 1
District D.I.Khan: 1
District Hangu: 2
District Lakki Marwat: 10
District Shangla: 1
District Torghar: 7
District Bajaur: 1
District Khyber: 1
District North Waziristan: 8
District South Waziristan: 1

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1511946/2...arwat-1-in-harnai-bring-total-to-76-this-year.
 
ISLAMABAD: Seven cases of the vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 — a type of the crippling disease for which vaccination in Pakistan were stopped in 2014 — have been detected in the northern areas of the country over the past few months, it has officially been confirmed.

Sources claimed that officials concerned had been reluctant for some time to admit that there was any case of the vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 in the country.

“It is not a wild poliovirus outbreak. It is an outbreak of Sabin-Like Type 2 Derived (SLT2D). Similar outbreaks have been recently reported in Philippines, China, Indonesia, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo and several other countries in Africa which have completely eradicated the poliovirus,” Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Zafar Mirza told Dawn.

There are three serotypes of wild poliovirus type 1, type 2, and type 3 each with a slightly different capsid protein.

Pakistan has been giving Type 1 and Type 3 viruses in Oral Polio Vaccines (OPVs), but had stopped administering Type 2 vaccine in 2014 and the virus could not be found even in environmental samples since 2016.

An environmental sample is declared positive if virus is found in sewage water.

“However, suddenly cases have been reported from different areas which mean there was some vial left in some laboratory or somewhere else and started spreading due to human error. Just after getting the cases, which cannot be included in the number of wild polio virus, we sent samples to the lab of Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, and after getting the confirmation, that children were paralysed due to Type 2 polio virus, we have started polio campaigns,” Dr Mirza said.

He said the virus had caused seven cases of paralysis in recent months, mainly in the northern parts of the country. Outbreaks of polio occur where a large number of children were under-immunised, he added.

“The only way to reduce the risks of further transmission is to address gaps in immunisation coverage. The polio programme is working on a comprehensive outbreak response that includes rounds of vaccination in the area to protect every child under the age of five years. The programme has also enhanced its acute flaccid paralysis surveillance by active search for additional cases, increasing testing of contacts of cases and strengthening environmental surveillance,” he said.

He said through the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) schedule, children in Pakistan receive routine immunisation against 10 vaccine-preventable diseases (childhood tuberculosis, poliomyelitis, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, hepatitis B, haemophilus influenza type b, pneumonia, diarrhoea and measles). Through the service pregnant women are also vaccinated against tetanus.

The secretary of the Ministry of National Health Services, Dr Allah Bakash Malik, told Dawn that Dr Mirza had directly taken the challenge and he was being supported by the entire team in the ministry.

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1515576/seven-cases-of-extinct-poliovirus-detected.
 
LAHORE/ISLAMABAD: Brin*ging Pakistan’s political issues under discussion at a global health forum for the first time, the International Monitoring Board (IMB) has declared the ‘polio programme and the importance of delivering polio vaccine has become a political football in the country’.

The IMB, which provides an independent assessment of the progress made by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) in the detection and interruption of polio transmission globally, sees lack of political unity behind polio resurgence in the country.

“Early in 2018, the Polio Programme in Pakistan believed that it was on the brink of interrupting wild poliovirus transmission. Just over a year later, the epidemiological picture in the country represents a massive reversal of the trajectory to global polio eradication,” says the latest IMB report.

The IMB also expresses serious concern over the September 2019 campaign in which the highest-ever number of missed children in Pakistan were reported. The reports says polio in Pakistan began its resurgence in the third quarter of 2018, and intensified in the second quarter of 2019, with a record number of cases (38) in that quarter alone. This was followed by 30 cases in the third quarter of 2019.

“The epidemiological situation is grave and of very deep concern. Pakistan has reported more than 80 per cent of the total global polio cases this year, with 90pc of them reported outside the traditional core reservoirs (Oct 25, 2019),” reads the IMB report.

“Throughout the lifetime of the IMB, the Technical Advisory Group for Pakistan has made helpful and constructive criticism of the polio programme in Pakistan allowing technical areas to be addressed and strengthened,” according to the IMB report. However, it says, the most recent report of this committee made a searing and devastating condemnation of the state of polio transmission in Pakistan.

Its report says, “The programme in KP has shifted from being an example to the country as a whole to becoming an emblem of the national programme’s current crisis. The KP has reassumed its position as a major global barrier to polio eradication.”

It says, “Transmission in Karachi is now everywhere”, while in Punjab “signs of programme deterioration are everywhere.”

The IMB in its November report states the polio programme remains particularly susceptible in many areas of Pakistan “where the power structure is divided between different political parties”.

The report says, “it seems extraordinary that the IMB’s analysis found that 89 per cent of all paralytic polio cases over nearly the last eight years have been in Pashto-speaking families (Oct 25, 2019). Yet the GPEI does not seem particularly interested in this striking statistic as an opportunity for a major breakthrough.”

The IMB questions, “How can the people of Pakistan have faith that the polio programme is working in their interests if they hear conflicting messages from their political leaders?”

The report also mentions that at the board’s meeting in October 2019, there could not have been a starker contrast between the Nigerian and the Pakistan government delegations. “Both groups were led by health ministers and those running the programme delivery,” it observes. But it says the Nigerian delegation included all three chairmen of the health committees in the House of Representatives and the Senate, who were from different political parties. “And what is more, Nigeria has just had a national election, just like Pakistan,” the IMB report says while releasing fresh report on the disturbing and alarming increase in polio cases in Pakistan.

“The IMB has found the GPEI and the country’s polio programme very slow to learn, or adopt best practices from elsewhere. Top programmatic performance is achieved when the best technical standards and procedures are delivered after being shaped and focused by accurate and timely local knowledge and context.

The number of wild poliovirus cases stood at 77 in Pakistan and at 19 in Afghanistan on Oct 29, 2019. The corresponding figures for the same time in 2018 were six for Pakistan and 19 for Afghanistan.

While talking to Dawn, spokesperson for the Ministry of National Health Services Sajid Shah said a new strategy had been formulated to address the issue and reappointment of Dr Rana Safdar as polio coordinator at the National Emergency Operation Centre was part of that strategy. “Dr Safdar reduced cases from 306 (in year 2014) to just eight in 2018,” he claimed.

So far this year 88 polio cases have been reported from across the country. Last year 12 cases were reported while only eight cases had been identified in 2017. Of the 88 cases reported from across the country, 64 were detected in KP only, while 10 cases were confirmed in Sindh, seven in Balochistan and five cases were found in Punjab.

Mr Shah agreed that there were issues with the programme in the past but said it had been reviewed to completely eradicate the virus. He said: “Special Assistant to Prime Minister Dr Zafar Mirza is in the UAE, collaborating with international donors and stakeholders to protect the children of Pakistan from polio virus.”

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1517651/monitoring-body-terms-polio-in-pakistan-political-football.
 
ISLAMABAD: The government of Pakistan has assured international donors and partners of renewing efforts to eradicate poliovirus amid serious concerns over its resurgence in the country.

The assurance was extended during the event “Reaching the Last Mile Forum” themed “Accelerating the Pace” held in Abu Dhabi and hosted by its Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed, in partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF).

RLM Forum is a biennial event that brings together global health leaders to share their insights and best practices on how to map out, eliminate and eradicate infectious diseases.

According to an official statement issued by the Ministry of National Health Services, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Health Dr Zafar Mirza met Bill Gates and shared Pakistan’s resolve to bring improvements in routine immunisation, nutrition, reproductive health and family planning.

The Gates Foundation pledged $1.08 billion and, along with other development partner organisations and governments in total, the meeting got pledges worth $2.6bn, including $160 million announced by Dr Mirza on behalf of Pakistan to eradicate polio from the world.

Polio remains endemic only in Pakistan and Afghanistan. The number of wild poliovirus cases stood at 77 in Pakistan and at 19 in Afghanistan as of Oct 29. The corresponding figures during the same period last year were six for Pakistan and 19 for Afghanistan.

The SAPM emphasised the unification of the polio programme with an expanded programme of immunisation to strengthen routine immunisation in the country and to ensure polio eradication. He claimed that 2020 would be a year of transformation for the programme.

Dr Mirza also met Norwegian state minister Aksal Jacosen, director of Centres for Disease Control Robert Redfield and president of BMGF Global Development Programme Dr Chris Elias. The purpose of the meetings was to increase collaboration in funding, technical assistance and the help of global experts towards improving health, nutrition and financial inclusion in Pakistan, according to the press release.

Meanwhile, the deputy commissioner of Naseerabad announced the launch of a five-day anti-polio campaign beginning on Dec 16 . “All available resources should be utilised to complete the campaign according to the prescribed targets,” he said during a meeting held in Dera Murad Jamali town of Balochistan.

The participants of the meeting were told that over a million children would be given anti-polio vaccines, 433 patrolling mobile teams would take part in a door-to-door campaign in 33 union councils and polio workers would be deputed at 30 transit and exit points and 36 fixed sites.

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1517930/pakistan-assures-donors-of-efforts-for-polio-eradication.
 
ISLAMABAD: After facing embarrassment over a monitoring body’s recent report stating that the polio programme had become a “political football” in Pakistan, the PTI-led federal government announced on Saturday the formation of a group constituting representatives from leading political parties to ensure polio eradication becomes collective responsibility of other parties-led provincial governments.

“The broad-based body National Strategic Advisory Group [NSAG] has been constituted in consultation with Prime Minister Imran Khan and will be led by Special Assistant to Prime Minister [SAPM] on Health Dr Zafar Mirza. It includes former focal person on polio in PPP-led government Shahnaz Wazir Ali, former focal person on polio in PML-N-led government Ayesha Raza Farooq and former Pakistan Permanent Representative at the UN Zamir Akram,” said Dr Rana Safdar, Polio Coordinator National Emergency Operation Centre for Polio.

“Other members include Chairman National Assembly Standing Committee on Health Khalid Magsi of the Balochistan Awami Party, Parliamentary Secretary for National Health Services Dr Nosheen Hamid and PTI lawmaker from Sindh Assembly Dr Sanjay Gangwani,” he added.

The International Monitoring Board published its report titled The Art of Survival: The poliovirus continues to exploit human frailties which explained in detail how the polio eradication programme had turned into a political football in the country. “The Polio Programme remains particularly susceptible in areas where the power structure is divided between different political parties. For example, Karachi, a city of 22 million people, is a longstanding ruling haven of the poliovirus. The PPP controls the provincial government, whilst the city government has largely been disempowered; it is run by the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, a regional political rival. The PTI, of course, governs at the federal level. It manages the overall polio vaccination effort. This fragmentation of power can lead to problems in efficiently carrying out vaccination campaigns.”

There has been extreme concern internationally as polio remains ende*mic in Pakistan besides Afghanistan with a dramatic increase in the number of polio cases in Pakistan this year.

Five more polio cases were reported on Friday, increasing the number of cases to 91. Last year, the number of confirmed cases stood at eight for Pakistan.

“We cannot afford to continue losing our children because of diseases that the rest of the world has effectively controlled through well-organised collective efforts,” said Dr Safdar.

“The NSAG could be a game-changer and would help in overcoming several challenges that our health sector faces in general and polio eradication in particular,” he added.

SAPM on Health Dr Mirza reappointed Dr Safdar on Nov 10 as the polio coordinator.

Giving more details about NSAG, Dr Safdar told Dawn, “We will also focus on routine immunisation as 20,000 children are born in Pakistan daily due to which immunity level is diluted if they are not vaccinated. We will build the team again as it disintegrated in the last one year.

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1518510/govt-seeks-parties-help-to-jointly-work-for-polio-eradication.
 
2 polio workers killed as team comes under attack in Swabi

Two polio workers were killed on Wednesday when their team came under attack in Swabi's Parmoli area.

According to Swabi's District Police Officer Imran Shahid, unidentified men opened fire at the polio team while they were on duty.

As a result of the firing, a lady health worker was killed on the spot while another was severely injured, the DPO said.

The injured lady health worker was rushed to the Kalu Khan Hospital. She was later shifted to the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, where she succumbed to her injuries during the course of treatment, according to LRH Medical Director Dr Khalid Masood.

Police have collected three bullet shells from the site of the shooting, the DPO said, adding that security in the area where the incident occurred was not on high alert.

Taking notice of the attack, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Mahmood Khan directed the Inspector General of Police Sanaullah Abbasi to submit a report on the incident.

He further directed police to take strict action against the perpetrators of the attack.

Attacks on polio workers are common in various parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. This is one of the biggest hindrances to the eradication of polio from the country.

Last year, the government formed the National Strategic Advisory Group (NSAG) to tackle polio eradication. The NSGA has representatives from leading political parties who have worked on polio eradication programmes in previous governments. The broad-based body was constituted in consultation with Prime Minister Imran Khan and is led by Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Zafar Mirza.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1531255/2-polio-workers-killed-as-team-comes-under-attack-in-swabi
 
Four new cases of polio detected in Sindh, Punjab

ISLAMABAD: Another four cases of polio, two each in Sindh and Punjab, have been found, an official of the National Institute of Health told Dawn. The samples of the patients were taken and referred to NIH last year.

“A five-year-old boy, a resident of Deenpur union council (UC), Thull tehsil, Jacobabad district, became paralysed due to poliovirus.

The other victim is a 48-month-old boy, a resident of Phulladyon UC, Sindhri tehsil, Mirpurkhas district,” the official said, requesting anonymity.

“The children paralysed by poliovirus in Punjab are both girls and they belong to the same district and UC. They are four and 10 months old, residents of Aali Wala UC, D.G. Khan tehsil, ” he said.

When contacted by Dawn, National Coordinator Emergency Operation Centre for Polio Dr Rana Safdar confirmed that four new cases had been detected.

“As we consider the date of collection of the samples for placing the cases in the year, all four cases have been placed in 2019 and the tally for the year has reached 144,” he said.

Dr Safdar said that so far seven cases had been confirmed in 2020 and the last case for the current year was reported from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The patient is an 18-month-old girl, a resident of Abba Khel UC, Lakki Marwat tehsil, he added.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1531760/four-new-cases-of-polio-detected-in-sindh-punjab
 
Nationwide polio eradication campaign begins today

ISLAMABAD: The year’s first nationwide polio vaccination drive is set to begin on Monday (today), apart from Karachi where the campaign began a week ago, aiming to vaccinate approximately 39.6 million children. The campaign will involve nearly 265,000 polio workers going door-to-door to inoculate children under the age of five.

Just a few days ago, the National Institute of Health confirmed five more polio cases from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, bringing the tally for the current year so far to 17. Last year, 144 cases were reported nationwide, 12 in 2018 and eight cases in 2017.

“Building on the successful national campaign in December last year, the nation is all set to undertake aggressive measures to push the virus back during 2020, setting the stage to root out polio from the country once and for all,” claimed Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Zafar Mirza.

“We have critically reviewed our performance during the last campaign and worked with provincial and district teams for even better preparedness for the upcoming vaccination effort,” he added.

Coordinator of the National Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) Dr Rana Muhammad Safdar said that the current geographical spread and the intensity of the virus transmission posed a real risk to children across the country.

“Reaching every child during the nationwide door-to-door campaign would provide a much-needed immunity boost to our children and ensure they stay protected from lifelong paralysis. Learning from 2019, we have the firm resolve to turn the situation around in 2020,” he said.

To benefit from a decrease in temperatures across the country as the cold weather makes it tough for the virus to survive, the polio eradication programme scheduled three back-to-back national campaigns during the months of December, February and April with two additional rounds in high-risk districts during January and March.

The EOC is also deploying 50 experts as facilitators across critical areas of the country to support anti-polio campaign workers in administering two drops of oral polio vaccine to every child during the February national campaign.

The programme has also launched “Sehat Tahafuz Helpline 1166” with local language capacities through which the public can report children who have not been vaccinated due to any reason.

Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by poliovirus mainly affecting children under the age of five. It invades the nervous system and can cause paralysis or even death. While there is no cure for polio, vaccination is the most effective way to protect children from this crippling disease.

Each time a child under the age of five is vaccinated, his or her protection against the virus is increased.

Repeated immunisations have protected millions of children from polio, allowing almost all countries in the world to become polio-free. There are only two countries in the world — Pakistan and Afghanistan — where polio cases continue to be reported.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1534964/nationwide-polio-eradication-campaign-begins-today
 
Mullahs in Pakistan spread the notion that anti-polio drops and vaccines are a conspiracy by the West to sterilise Muslims.
 
Gawar mullahs and gawar KPK walay will never learn. Sad we still have children who suffer because of these parasites.
 
Chaman polio case brings this year’s tally to 50

ISLAMABAD: The first case of polio during high transmission season has been reported due to which tally for the current year has reached 50.

According to an official of the National Institute of Health (NIH), who requested anonymity, the child belongs to Balochistan.

“A 17-month-old female child, resident of Kila Abdullah district, Chaman tehsil, Sirki Taleri union council, has become the fresh victim. The child’s lower limb has been paralysed and the socioeconomic status of child is declared poor,” he said.

The official said the child did not receive even a single dose of oral polio vaccine during the last six supplementary immunisation activities [polio campaigns] due to which she easily fell prey to the crippling virus.

“Unfortunately, due to the novel coronavirus (Covid-19), the polio campaigns have been severely affected and it is feared that the number of polio cases can increase in the coming months as high transmission season has started,” he said.

It is worth mentioning that poliovirus remains less active in the low transmission season from September to May because of low temperatures. However, it becomes more active from June to August, which is when more children can be affected. That is why even polio campaigns are halted during high transmission period.

According to the data of the current year, as many as 20 cases have been reported from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 17 from Sindh, 11 from Balochistan and two cases from Punjab.

In 2019, as many as 146 cases of the crippling disease were reported as compared to 12 cases in 2018 and only eight cases in 2007.

Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by poliovirus mainly affecting children under the age of five. It invades the nervous system, and can cause paralysis or even death.

While there is no cure for polio, vaccination is the most effective way to protect children from this crippling disease. Each time a child under the age of five is vaccinated, his/her protection against the virus is increased. Repeated immunisations have protected millions of children from polio, allowing almost all countries in the world to become polio free.

However, there are only two countries in the world — Pakistan and Afghanistan — where polio cases are still being reported.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1561633/chaman-polio-case-brings-this-years-tally-to-50
 
Plan ready to restart polio eradication drive: army chief

RAWALPINDI: General Qamar Javed Bajwa, Chief of the Army Staff, and Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, had a phone conversation on Wednesday about the polio eradication programme.

While discussing the polio eradication drive in Pakistan, Mr Gates appreciated Pakistan Army’s help in enabling the campaign through provision of security, monitoring and bridging of capacity gaps.

The army chief said that it was a national duty and Army played a part in the significant initiatives undertaken by the government of Pakistan and healthcare departments of the provinces. The healthcare workers who played the most important part in polio drive had also acted as the frontline defence against Covid-19.

The COAS said that despite Covid-19 outbreak in the country, Pakistan Army in support of the government’s efforts had made preparations to restart the anti-polio campaign in the coming weeks.

The two discussed the challenges in the face of pandemic threat and efforts to enhance the resilience of population through education, flexible healthcare management and use of technology.

The army chief thanked Mr Gates for his foundation’s efforts towards the noble cause and said that every initiative aimed at betterment of Pakistan and its people would be fully supported and appreciated.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1562732/plan-ready-to-restart-polio-eradication-drive-army-chief
 
Polio case detected in Karachi

ISLAMABAD: A polio case was reported from Sindh on Monday taking the total number of such cases during the current year to 57.

According to an official of the National Institute of Health Sciences, (NIH) a five-year-old boy, a resident of Union Council 1 of Landhi, Karachi, became paralysed because of the poliovirus.

“The boy’s right upper and lower limb is paralysed,” he said. Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by poliovirus mainly affecting children under the age of five.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1567484/polio-case-detected-in-karachi
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><335> As things are improving on COVID front we are resuming polio campaigns in specific localities from July 20. 2 days to go! All SOP’s of social distancing & safety of vaccination will be strictly followed. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NayaPakistanSehatmandPakistan?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NayaPakistanSehatmandPakistan</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/EndPolioNow?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#EndPolioNow</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/WarAgainstPolio?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#WarAgainstPolio</a> <a href="https://t.co/uYvrkYuDNZ">pic.twitter.com/uYvrkYuDNZ</a></p>— Zafar Mirza (@zfrmrza) <a href="https://twitter.com/zfrmrza/status/1284529976021221376?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Cases slow as Pakistan readies anti-polio drive

Pakistani authorities reported 1,579 new COVID-19 cases, the lowest number in more than a month, as health officials plan to resume a much-awaited nationwide anti-polio campaign next week.

Authorities conducted 22,559 tests in the past 24 hours. The additional cases bring to 263,500 the total number of confirmed infections, with a total of 5,568 deaths.

The improvement in infections coincides with Monday’s three-day anti-polio drive that aims to reach 800,000 children.
 
Prime Minister Imran Khan spoke to Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, on Tuesday to discuss the coronavirus situation and the resumption of polio vaccination campaigns in Pakistan, Radio Pakistan reported.

During the telephonic conversation, the premier informed Gates about the improving coronavirus situation in Pakistan with a considerable reduction in new cases and the fatality rate.

PM Imran said that the federal government's “smart lockdown” policy proved to effective in curbing the pandemic.

The premier noted that timely interventions enabled the government to mitigate the effects of COVID-19 on health and economy and avert a major catastrophe.

The premier acknowledged the Gates Foundation’s continued support to Pakistan which includes the COVID-19 response and reaffirmed polio eradication as a key priority of the government.

Both the prime minister and Gates agreed to enhance the polio programme to ensure vaccination for all children, including in the remote areas.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/302372-pm-imran-bill-gates-exchange-views-over-covid-19-polio-eradication
 
RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa spoke to Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, on Saturday to discuss the coronavirus situation and the resumption of the polio vaccination campaign in Pakistan,

Gates in his phone call conveyed his appreciation for the Pakistan Army for supporting the national polio drive and ensuring proper reach and coverage.

The army chief said it was a national cause and national effort for a polio-free Pakistan. “Credit goes to grassroots workers including mobile teams, Law Enforcement Agencies and healthcare representatives,” the army chief was quoted as saying by Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

The two also discussed the efforts needed to effectively conduct the polio campaign amidst the COVID-19 epidemic.

“Mr Gates also appreciated Pakistan’s success against COVID-19 despite resource constraints. COAS attributed the success to a true national response executed through the mechanism of NCOC which allowed optimisation of resources,” the military’s media wing said.

It added, “Mr Gates reiterated The Gates Foundation ongoing commitment to fight pandemics around the world and to support Pakistan in its goals of ending polio and improving health for every child.”

Nationwide polio campaign begins

A nationwide polio immunisation campaign was launched in the country on Thursday from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to vaccinate 34 million children under the age of five in 130 districts across the country.

The campaign will kick-start in Punjab and Sindh today and on August 17 in Balochistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK).

The campaign will be conducted following the successful resumption of polio activities in July 2020 after a four-month suspension due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It is imperative that Pakistan continues its fight against polio with an already accessible, safe and widely used vaccine that has saved countless children from polio worldwide. I am hopeful that parents will continue to realize the importance of vaccinating their children during this campaign in August and help our nation ultimately end the threat of polio,” Dr Faisal Sultan, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on National Health Services said on the occasion.

As with the last campaign held in July, polio vaccinators will continue to adhere to stringent operating procedures while vaccinating children to protect themselves and families from COVID-19. Vaccinators have been trained ahead of the campaign to undertake prevention measures, including keeping a safe distance from children and families while administering drops and ensuring that parents themselves hold their children.

According to Dr Rana Safdar, Coordinator of the National Emergency Operations Centre (NEOC) of the Pakistan Polio Eradication Programme, the campaign in August would help Pakistan tackle increased virus transmission within hotspots of virus circulation across the nation.

“The August campaign is much bigger than the last campaign held in July, we are hoping to reach many more vulnerable children.

I was encouraged with the success of our last campaign, particularly how parents cooperated with vaccinators despite the COVID environment, and how our vaccinators followed the COVID safety precautions they were trained on," he said.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/302852-co...tans-response-to-polio-covid-19-in-phone-call
 
Anti-polio teams come under attacks in Bahawalnagar, Faisalabad

BAHAWALNAGAR: Police arrested two out of the six suspects who were booked on Tuesday in two separate incidents for attacking anti-polio teams, including two senior health officials and harassing female workers.

According to Minchinabad Deputy District Health Officer (DDHO) Dr Abdullah Khan, during the three-day anti-polio campaign in the district, a team faced resistance in Basti Mochipura of Fidai Shah union council by a local, Ghulam Hussain Cheena.

He said that on receiving the information, he along with Health CEO Dr Shahid Saleem rushed to the location and tried to convince Hussain to let the team do its job.

However, he said, Hussain hurled threats at the team and later attacked the workers forcing them to leave the area.

He said an FIR had been lodged with Minchinabad police against the suspect.

In the second incident, the DDHO said, a polio team in Basti Hussain Kot faced resistance from a local Naveed and four others who threatened the workers, stopped them from administering polio drops to children and misbehaved with the female team members. He said an FIR was registered against the suspects at the Mcleod Ganj police station.

Police said that two of the suspects nominated in the FIRs had been arrested.

According to police sources, in Dona Miana village in Mcleod Ganj, locals protested against a polio team and refused to get children vaccinated.

Later, police were called and after talks the locals were convinced to get their children vaccinated.

FAISALABAD: The D-Type Colony police on on Tuesday registered a case against a couple on charges of thrashing a polio workers team in Allama Iqbal Colony.

In an application submitted to the police, Asma Noreen, a sanitary patrol of union council 243, said she along with other polio workers knocked at the door of Faizan’s house for administering polio vaccine drops to the children.

She said the suspect and his wife opened the door and started misbehaving with the polio workers.

She said the couple thrashed the workers and also tore their clothes.

Ms Noreen said the polio workers had to take shelter in a nearby house to save themselves, but the suspects chased them and broke the house’s door. She added that area residents witnessed the entire episode.

The police booked the couple under sections 186, 354, 427 and 506-B of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC), with no arrest.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1575155/anti-polio-teams-come-under-attacks-in-bahawalnagar-faisalabad
 
One new polio case takes Balochistan’s tally to 18

Balochistan reported on Monday another polio case, taking the provincial tally to 18.

A 15-month-old girl in Pishin District is infected with the poliovirus. Her samples were taken on August 20, local media reported.

Last week, another case surfaced in the province, where a 34-month-old from Union Council Alizai had been infected.

So far, Pakistan has reported 68 polio cases this year.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40016911/one-new-polio-case-takes-balochistans-tally-to-18
 
TOBA TEK SINGH/LAHORE: A six-month-old girl has been diagnosed with the poliovirus even though she was administered with the vaccine for the deadly disease, reported The News.

The publication reported that Bashir Ahmad, a resident of Chak Akbar Sahu located near the River Ravi’s Head Sidhnai, had informed the provincial Health Department that his daughter's one leg had become paralysed. Following the report, the department sent a stool sample of the child to the National Institute of Health based in Islamabad, where the officials confirmed that the six-month-old had poliovirus Type-2.

District Health Authority Chief Executive Officer Dr Mumtaz Hussain, told The News, that in an inquiry they had later discovered that the baby had been immunised not just for polio but other epidemic diseases as well.

Following the report, Dr Mumtaz ordered an inspection of Pirmahal Tehsil’s Union Council 73 for the vaccine and found out that the other children in the area were also not immunized. He added that a special anti-polio vaccination drive has been launched in the union council while a special campaign has also started in all other tehsils of the district.

On the other hand, Punjab Polio Programme spokesman Wasif Mahmood denied the report of a new case in Toba Tek Singh. He told the publication that the infant was among the six cases of poliovirus Type-2 reported a couple of weeks ago from Faisalabad, Jhang and Toba Tek Singh districts.

However, when questioned about the vaccine, Mahmood dismissed the notion that there were problems in it. He instead blamed weak routine immunisation as the main reason for the emergence of poliovirus Type-2.

“Three districts of Faisalabad, Jhang and Toba Tek Singh have been specially marked with weak routine immunization,” Mahmood was quoted by The News.

12 cases reported in Punjab
The case of the six-month-old has taken Punjab’s total of children diagnosed with the type-2 of the virus to 12, while overall 62 cases have been reported countrywide in 2020.

In 2020 so far, 42 cases were confirmed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 12 in Punjab, seven in Sindh and one in Balochistan. Compared to the preceding years, only two cases of type-2 were confirmed in the country in 2015, one in 2016, none in 2017 and 2018, but a surge was reported in 2019.

National drive set to kick off from Sept 21
Punjab Polio Programme Incharge Sundas Irshad shared that a national polio vaccination drive will be launched on September 21.

“The campaign will help break the transmission of the virus,” she added.

The administration of the vaccine has already been suffering in the country because of the coronavirus, over 30 million children, including 18 million in Punjab alone, have not been administered with the vaccine.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/308534-six-month-old-diagnosed-with-polio-despite-being-immunized
 
Anti-Polio campaign targets over 0.28mn children in Tharparkar

MITHI: National anti polio drive will commence from November 30th to December 4 and during the campaign about 2,80,923 children up to five years would be administered anti polio vaccine.

A meeting was held on Friday to review and finalize arrangements in Deputy Commissioner office Tharparkar Muhammad Nawaz Soho in chair.

The meeting was informed that a total 1046 teams had been devised including 877 mobile teams, 73 fixed point teams and 96 transit teams while 74 UCMOs and 213 area in-charges would supervise the teams.

During the National Anti Polio Campaign commencing from Nov 30, 2020 to Dec 04, 2020 across the district, 634 lady health workers would administer the polio drops to the children of up to five years at their homes.

The DC urged officials of relevant departments to ensure 100 percent success of the polio campaign by playing a proactive role in administering the vaccine.

He also instructed for observance of SOPs in the wake of the second wave of Corona Pandemic during training and field work of polio teams.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/4003...ign-targets-over-028mn-children-in-tharparkar
 
Prime Minister Imran Khan held a telephonic conversation with Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Wednesday, the two exchanged views on the raging Covid-19 pandemic, polio eradication campaign, health and development issues as well as climate change.

Recalling his recent letter addressed to the American business mogul on climate change, the prime minister apprised him of Pakistan’s flagship initiatives, including the 10 billion tree tsunami initiative.

Gates acknowledged Pakistan’s commitment to addressing climate change and agreed that the world must come together to face this global challenge.

While highlighting that food systems are particularly vulnerable to climate change, he emphasised that global leaders should prioritise investments in agricultural research for adaptation.

He also suggested PM Khan leverage Pakistan’s unique voice to raise awareness for increasing global support for smallholder farmers.

The prime minister expressed appreciation for the work of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for fighting poverty, including combating the Covid-19 pandemic and inequalities around the world.

Commending the Gates Foundation's strong advocacy to promote equitable access to Covid-19 vaccines, the PM underscored the importance of equitable, timely and scaled delivery of Covid-19 vaccines to low-income countries.

PM Imran Khan and Gates also agreed on the importance of urgently stopping the spread of Covid-19, polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases in Pakistan.

Read More Polio eradication vital for Pakistan’s positive image, says PM Imran

The prime minister also reaffirmed that eradication of polio remained a key priority of the government and efforts were underway to intensify the anti-polio campaign across the country despite Covid-19 related challenges.

Pakistan's robust partnership with the Gates Foundation was also acknowledged including the foundation's continued support to the Ehsaas Programme, which helps the most vulnerable segment of Pakistan’s population.

The premier and Bill Gates agreed to continue working together on shared objectives.

Express Tribune
 
al jazeera - latest on pakistan polio:

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ISLAMABAD: Microsoft founder Bill Gates spoke to Prime Minister Imran Khan Wednesday and discussed the polio eradication efforts in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

They discussed the current health situation in Afghanistan and expressed concern over efforts to eradicate polio in the country so that the people of Afghanistan can remain safe from the disease and also, to protect Pakistan's gains towards the virus.

During the call, PM Imran Khan highlighted that more than half of the population in the war-torn country was living below the poverty line and is in dire need of financial assistance.

He asked Bill Gates to consider providing humanitarian assistance to the Afghan people, stated Radio Pakistan.

Gates also praised Pakistan's efforts to eradicate the disease and at the same time, pledged his continued support against the disease so that no child in Pakistan is paralysed due to it in the future.

PM Imran Khan also reaffirmed his government's commitment to end all forms of polio in Pakistan.

The PM told Gates that Pakistan had reported only one case of wild poliovirus this year and the progress against polio virus is positive.
 
A 15-month-old boy was paralysed by wild poliovirus in the first such case in 15 months. This is the third case of wild polio to be recorded globally in 2022.

The type-1 wild poliovirus (WPV1) was confirmed in the child from North Waziristan on April 22, 2022 by the Pakistan National polio laboratory at the NIH, Islamabad, with the onset of paralysis on April 9.

The Pakistan polio laboratory also confirmed the detection of a positive environmental sample collected on April 5 from Bannu district of the same province. Both the viruses are closely related to each other.

Pakistan had reported one case last year with onset on January 27 in Killa Abdullah, Balochistan.

“This is, of course, a tragedy for the child and his family and it is also very unfortunate both for Pakistan and polio eradication efforts all over the world. We are disappointed but not deterred,” Secretary Health Aamir Ashraf said. “The case has appeared in Southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where the poliovirus was detected in the environment late last year and where an emergency action plan is already being implemented.”

The health secretary added, “The National and Provincial Polio Emergency Operations Centres have deployed teams to conduct a full investigation of the recent case, while emergency immunisation campaigns are underway to prevent further spread of the wild poliovirus in Pakistan.”

Southern Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa had been identified by the polio programme as the area most at risk after wild poliovirus was detected in environmental samples in the last quarter of 2021. Positive environmental samples of wild poliovirus in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa had been found in DI Khan and Bannu divisions.

“This validates the programme’s concerns about virus circulation in Southern KP and strengthens our resolve to reach every child with the polio vaccine,” National Emergency Operations Centre (NEOC) Coordinator Dr Shahzad Baig said.

To address the challenges in Southern K-P, the government and global polio partners had already initiated an emergency action plan to address the challenges in this part of the province,” Dr Baig added.

In 2020, the K-P reported 22 cases, while no wild poliovirus cases were recorded in the province last year.

Substantial progress has been made recently, with most areas accessible to implement immunisation campaigns, but deep-rooted problems and security concerns remain in limited areas. Despite the challenges, the programme’s brave frontline workers continue to reach children with the life-saving vaccine.

Wild poliovirus types 2 and 3 have been eradicated globally, while WPV1 cases are at a historic low. Two other WPV1 cases have been reported this year, one each in Afghanistan and Malawi.

The programme is capitalising on the momentum gained in the last year and continues to strive for zero-polio. Parents must continue to vaccinate their children during every immunization round until they reach the age of five.

Pakistan remains one of only two countries in the world with circulating wild poliovirus, together with Afghanistan. Polio is a highly infectious virus and until this last remaining epidemiological bloc wipes out polio, children all over the world remain at risk of life-long paralysis or fatality by the poliovirus.

Express Tribune
 
Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and Microsoft co-founder and billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates discussed Pakistan's commitment to polio eradication, and the Covid-19 situation in the country in a telephone call, the military's media affairs wing said on Friday.

In a statement, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said Gates appreciated the army for supporting the country's polio drive and ensuring proper reach and coverage. The army chief responded that polio eradication was a national cause, adding that "credit goes to all involved in the process".

Gates also appreciated Pakistan's success in combatting the coronavirus pandemic despite resource constraints. For his part, Bajwa attributed it to a "true national response" executed through the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC).

The army chief appreciated Gates' efforts towards polio eradication and the coronavirus response and assured the philanthropist of continued cooperation, according to the statement.

Earlier this year, Gates had visited Pakistan for the first time and held meetings with the then-prime minister, the president and other national and provincial leaders. He had also attended a luncheon and a ceremony to confer on him one of the country's highest civil awards.

President Dr Arif Alvi had conferred the Hilal-i-Pakistan on Gates in recognition of his philanthropic services for humanity, eradication of polio and betterment of the people of Pakistan.

Gates had also visited the NCOC and chaired a meeting of the National Emergency Operation Centre (NEOC) on polio. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is part of a global initiative between governments and international organisations fighting the crippling disease.

While calling Pakistan's commitment to ending polio "inspiring", Gates had said the country was near the end-game against the disease.

In a telephone call with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif earlier this month, Gates had assured Pakistan of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's continued support "for ensuring that no child is at risk of paralysis due to poliovirus" in the country.

Pakistan had reported only one case of polio in 2021 but after remaining polio-free for almost 15 months, the country has now reported a second case in less than 10 days.

The new cases have created panic among the officials concerned as the virus can travel along with people because of massive movement during Eid holidays.

DAWN
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We have launched a new anti-polio campaign with a renewed zeal & focus. There is a complete synergy of thought and action among the provinces & other stakeholders to eradicate polio. A polio-free Pakistan is our national goal.</p>— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) <a href="https://twitter.com/CMShehbaz/status/1526819054987755521?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Pakistan’s former cricket all-rounder Abdur Razzaq has urged the parents to continue vaccinating children against polio until the virus is completely eradicated from Pakistan.

Prolific Test cricketer made this call on Tuesday at the launch of the pre-campaign polio National Immunisation Day preparations held at Samanabad Hospital.

The national cricketer announced to join polio eradication efforts and hoped that no child suffered from the crippling disease.

Punjab plans to inoculate nearly 22 million children in the upcoming vaccination drive starting from May 23, which will help boost children’s immunity against the virus. Punjab is fully acquainted of the potential impact on the country’s most populous province and remains committed tracking and vaccinating all children. Punjab has deployed over 160,000 mobile and transit teams to vaccinate all children five years of age and below in the upcoming campaign.

The teams have been instrumental in delivering the vaccines at doorsteps and serves as a frontline force in addressing concerns of the communities at all levels of implementation. “Polio eradication must remain an urgent priority. And we need to maintain the highest level of vigilance to keep Punjab polio-free”, said Abdur Razzaq who was the part of Pakistan cricket team squad that won the ICC World Twenty20 in 2009.

Razzaq also acknowledged the efforts of polio team towards effective implementation of vaccination campaigns at field level irrespective of security and access challenges. Speaking on the occasion, head of the polio programme in Punjab Ms Syedah Ramallah Ali appreciated the commitment of the national cricketer.

“We need to vaccinate 100 percent of children in order to achieve population immunity and prevent re-circulation”, she added.

https://pakobserver.net/cricketer-razzaq-joins-polio-drive/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">In a phone call last night, Bill Gates & I discussed polio eradication challenges in our flood-hit areas. Government will continue to work with Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to ensure no child remains at risk of this deadly virus. I thanked Mr Gates for his consistent support.</p>— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) <a href="https://twitter.com/CMShehbaz/status/1602899728445935616?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 14, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Balochistan reports first polio case in 3 years

In a concerning development, Balochistan has reported its first polio case in three years, as confirmed by health department sources.

The victim, a two-and-a-half-year-old child hailing from the Dera Bugti district of Balochistan, tested positive for the poliovirus, raising alarms within the province.

Health department sources disclosed that test samples were collected from the child on Feb 22 with subsequent analysis confirming the presence of the debilitating virus.

This marks the first polio case reported in Balochistan for the year 2024.The last recorded instance of polio in Quetta dates back to February 2021, originating from Qila Abdullah. However, the recent detection signals a re-emergence of the virus, highlighting potential gaps in vaccination coverage and surveillance.

Disturbingly, health department sources revealed the presence of the poliovirus in environmental samples from Quetta since August of the preceding year.

This discovery starkly contrasts with the two-and-a-half years of poliovirus absence from environmental samples until August 2023, underlining a concerning regression in the region's eradication efforts.

In response to the resurgence, the health department announced a targeted polio campaign slated to commence on March 24 across nine districts of Quetta. The initiative aims to swiftly contain the spread of the virus and bolster vaccination efforts within the community.

The reappearance of polio in Quetta serves as a stark reminder of the persistent challenges faced in eradicating the disease entirely. The authorities have been urged to intensify immunisation drives and enhance surveillance measures to prevent further outbreaks and safeguard public health.

SOURCE: EXPRESS TRIBUNE
 
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