India offers help to end polio in Pakistan

Dr Harsh Vardhan says Pakistan can draw on the Indian experience and learn from the challenges that were faced there


Aditi Phadnis October 26, 2014
India offers help to end polio in Pakistan

NEW DELHI: India’s Minister for Health and Family Welfare Dr Harsh Vardhan has offered assistance to Pakistan’s government in its fight against the crippling poliovirus.

Dr Vardhan pointed out that though India was polio-free now, there was always the danger of the virus resurfacing as Pakistan accounts for 85% of the world’s polio cases. He said it was imperative the two countries cooperated to permanently eliminate this threat.

“We have extended cooperation to Pakistan in the past as well. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has issued some reasonable statements about rooting it out and we want to assure him of our support,” Dr Vardhan said. Nawaz had announced a ‘National Emergency Action Plan-2014’ to take steps for polio eradication on a war footing.

“I have been through the plan and find that the script is perfect. Pakistan has resolved to set up monitoring cells at the grassroots.

They are also talking of involving social groups, a strategy which worked wonderfully in India,” the minister said.

Dr Vardhan said Pakistan could draw on the Indian experience and learn from the challenges that were faced while transforming India from a country with 60% of the world’s polio cases to a certified polio-free nation. “This particular model would stand Pakistan in good stead. Unless all stakeholders, most importantly its religious clergy, are involved, it would be impossible to achieve total polio eradication.”

Referring to the threat of the virus entering India from Pakistan and Afghanistan, Dr Vardhan said measures have been put in place at border crossings. These include vaccination for those travelling both ways and emergency response plans.

“The ministry will introduce the injectable vaccine in the immunisation programme next year — in line with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative’s action plan,” he added.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 26th, 2014.

COMMENTS (36)

Bewildered | 10 years ago | Reply

@Sunil:

"But the fact is I am importing labour from Bihar / Bengal/ UP at the rate of 300 Rupees (5$) a day."

Divide $5 over a family of 4 and you will get precisely $1.25 per day per person. Moreover, only lucky people get paid for 30 days in a month as most unskilled laborers are given only daily wages, even in your own factory. Aren't they?

kdp | 10 years ago | Reply

@asad rizvi: India has worked very hard to eliminate Polio. Since we are neighbors it is very likely that infection may migrate to India from Pakistan. It is in India's interest to help Pakistan. They are trying their best to tackle the problems you have mentioned that equally apply to Pakistan also.

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