The fact is that a significant number of children who have been paralysed by polio had indeed been vaccinated. This applies to the latest case in Vehari as well. The father of the one year old boy who can now no longer walk or crawl says that he had insured all the scheduled vaccines where administrated to his child. Other parents have told similar stories. Concern has also been expressed in the media about the quality of the vaccine and whether it truly works at all. The growing evidence that there may be problems is disturbing.
Worst of all, Pakistan appears to be losing its battle against a disease which most other countries around the world have been able to eradicate. Polio is endemic in only four countries: Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan. This is shameful. A decade ago, Pakistan appeared to have been winning the war on polio. We are now quite obviously losing it. More and more children are struck down by the virus each year. The National Polio Emergency, declared early this year, seems to have had very little impact in stopping the spread. This is something we need to think about very seriously. We simply cannot afford a worsening of the situation. We already have polio in districts where it had not been known for years. We certainly do not want it to reach other places and to affect the lives of other families in such a negative fashion.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 5th, 2012.
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Well, Pakistan is going to be in the company of Afghanistan and Nigeria alone. Come this January 13th, if India does not record a single case of polio , it will have been totally polio free for 2 years in running and can officially declare itself polio free.