With three more cases confirmed on Wednesday, Pakistan inched closer to the highest number of polio cases ever recorded in the country; 199 recorded in 2000. It is now 12 cases away from breaking its own 14-year-old ‘record’.
The National Institute of Health in Islamabad has confirmed the three new cases, all from Khyber Agency, taking the country’s total to 187.
The first victim is nine-month-old Aliya, daughter of Gulab Khan who is a resident of Kalanga village in Akka Khel. Nadia, 11-month-old daughter of Faqir Hussain, is the second victim who lives in Zarmin Chok village, while the third child is Hazir, a 13-month-old, who lives in Haji Jalandar Kalay village in Akka Khel.
None of the three children had received the polio vaccine.
On the rise
According to health experts, the number of cases is likely to increase to 200 in the remaining months of 2014 as the disease has spread rapidly. Waziristan and Khyber Agency are some of the major areas where children have not been vaccinated, they said.
The experts insist if government plans to eradicate polio, it would have to vaccinate children from these agencies who have not been vaccinated for over three years.
The how and why
An official of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) health department official said polio cases are likely to exceed 200 this year.
The official cited a series of factors which have contributed to the spread of polio in the province.
“Polio workers are unable to access some parts of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) – such as North and South Waziristan, FR Bannu and Bara, Khyber Agency,” he said.
This is problematic because there are families which continue to live in North Waziristan despite the military offensive, he said. Children in the area have not received polio vaccines.
The absence of coordination between the government and its partner organisations has also contributed to the increase in polio cases, he added.
According to the official, there is a huge gap in coordination between government officials and Unicef officials in K-P and Fata and officials of Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) in the health department have admitted to the lack of coordination.
Another reason cited by the health department official for the high incidence of polio in the province is the absence of a clear payment setup for polio workers. Many vaccinators received limited or no payment for their services, he said.
According to him, for the last three months permanent vaccinators have not been paid. The salaries of other vaccinators who work on a daily basis remain marginal, he added. The government pays them only Rs300 to Rs500 per day.
Ray of hope
Unicef’s Immunisation Officer Dr Bilal Ahmad said the government and Unicef have made a concerted effort to eradicate polio from the country. Peshawar, which was once a breeding ground for the virus, has been cleared of the epidemic. The incidence of polio in North Waziristan has also been under control as repeated vaccination campaigns have boosted children’s immunity, he added.
According to the Unicef official, the displacement of families from North Waziristan and the low-transmission season have provided an opportunity for the virus to be controlled. Plans have been implemented for the low transmission season and he hoped that they will be successful in controlling the crippling virus.
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Published in The Express Tribune, October 2nd, 2014.
COMMENTS (22)
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Healthcare is a provincial subject and KPK govt must be man enough to deal with this epidemic. Get out of Islamabad and come home to do your job or resign from the govt. PTI performance in KPK would be test for their future.
Dipak@joy: Fertility has nothing to do with polio vaccination. Illiteracy and religion taught by twisted mullahs are the problem. Come out of StoneAge.
@ OpenUrEyes:"In india and Bangla where everyone is forced to have polio drops at gunpoint, the fertility rate has dropped to 2.1. It is so low that they will soon see population reduction. In Pakistan it is still a healthy 3. Conclusion is obvious" All I can respond is....please open ur mind and eyes both.
@WB:
It's so obvious and yet these liberals can't see it. They only say that Syrian and Egyptian polio strains have Pakistani DNA, but no one is checking whether Pakistani strain has Modi's DNA. Pakistan should demand UNO to have WHO collect a cheek swab from Modi. Who knows, we may be able to put biological warfare sanctions on him.
@Adil: Who cares !! Go Nawaz Go
Please don't be so obstinate. Its a matter of priority on which we should all come togethe and join hands, forgetting our narrow political differences. Please reconsider your blind obsession against one individual.
By the way - Go Nawaz Go!!
In india and Bangla where everyone is forced to have polio drops at gunpoint, the fertility rate has dropped to 2.1. It is so low that they will soon see population reduction. In Pakistan it is still a healthy 3. Conclusion is obvious.
C'mon Pakistan - you can do it.
In all other fields Pakistanis start comparing India don't know why they never bother about Polio eradication programme where India got rid of this deadly virus long ago, come on compete in this field for the sake of future of your Nation.
Our lawmakers are busy in saving democracy, why don't they pass a law to punish the parents who refuse to immunize their child.
Ever since Modi became India's PM, polio cases are on the rise in Pakistan.
dont get disheartened; we still have 3 months to beat the record
The world health organization should slap a ban on Pakistanis from traveling abroad to wake the health department from its slumber. Otherwise we will see no improvement.
Continued failure of the successive governments is culminating into this situation.
Pakistan can't overcome polio unless they are serious about tackling it rather than competing India on polio.....
Regretfully nobody is interested in saving the lives and health of our kids. We have all the resources for a million man army with highest perks in the world, hundreds of nuclear warheads but no attention to the children's healthcare, education, nutrition, and well-being. The zeal, energy and money our leaders and rulers of KPK are spending for a few more seats could have changed the lives of our kids. However, they have more imp things to do.
Who cares !! Go Nawaz Go
pakistan don't blame this on india.
Its a real shame - only 3 countries in the world left to eradicate polio- Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. Scientists must develop a halal vaccine soon, so that mullahs don't spread conspiracy theories on it. It must be quickly eradicated, else, it might spread to other places by people travelling there. There is evidence it has spread to Syria.
Here is a country where illiteracy and religion are coming in the way of progress.
Note: ET please print this comment for the sake of health and humanity.
Pakistan is a high-achiever in this area. It only has itself as a competitor.
Pray to your God and don't believe in medical science.
Time to re-federalise some elements of healthcare and have an all out drive to get rid polio and dengue