Life and well-being of citizens is not always a high national priority. It may, therefore, not come as an earth-shattering revelation that almost no controls exist in Pakistan to screen and detect passengers with Ebola symptoms. Incoming international flights do not give any health card or health questionnaire to passengers arriving at Pakistani airports. Even if a passenger was to fill a health card, there is no arrangement for collecting or scrutinising this information.
In a recent study carried out at the Karachi airport, it was found that the health card system has been effectively discontinued. Passengers are not even verbally questioned about the countries visited or contact made with an Ebola patient in the last 21 days. It is interesting that a large purposeless desk, with the word ‘Ebola’ written on it, is prominently placed along the route of the arriving passengers. An impressive and costly thermal scanner has been installed to give an impression that it is there for temperature monitoring. This, too, is, however, ineffective in trying to detect a particular high temperature person amongst the hordes of people walking past in groups.
The health officials who stand around the ‘Ebola’ desk appear to have no particular mandate. They ask no questions, collect no forms, examine no suspect cases and wear no protective equipment. Pakistan may, therefore, be the only country that is waiting to welcome Ebola with open arms.
It is critical that Pakistan urgently institutes a number of integrated mechanisms to screen, detect, control and manage real and potential cases of Ebola. As a first step, all airlines arriving at any Pakistani airport must be asked to give health cards to all disembarking passengers before landing. It must be mandatory for every arriving person to fill and submit this card to health officials at the airport of landing. Secondly, health counters must be established at all entry points, making it mandatory for all incoming passengers to pass through them. These counters need to be manned by trained staff wearing protective equipment, i.e., gloves, goggles, caps and face masks. All health cards must be collected and examined at these points. Passengers, who have visited Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea or had any contact with an individual suffering from Ebola in the last 21 days, should be separated, questioned and examined in a segregated examination room. Such examination rooms must be established at each airport for detailed questioning and examination of those who visited any of the three Ebola-stricken countries or had any contact with an Ebola patient in the last 21 days.
Depending upon the level of exposure, passengers should be categorised into one of the four risk levels — high risk, some risk, low risk and no risk. People showing any Ebola symptom and categorised in any of high, some, or low risk categories, must be shifted to isolation wards of designated hospitals. Such individuals must be kept in isolation until doctors are certain that Ebola is not a concern.
Those who show no Ebola symptoms, but have been exposed to high, some or low risk levels could be allowed to go home under controlled conditions. Depending upon their risk level, such people are monitored (by physical examination or telephonic feedback) till they safely complete 21 days of their last Ebola-related contact.
One needs to appreciate that the official announcements such as ‘Ebola counters should be set up at airports, doctors must be trained, hospitals must develop isolation wards and provinces have been told to report cases’, while pleasing to the ear, are hardly of any consequence. What is needed is an integrated system that can link and sustain all elements of screening, detection and management of Ebola cases. It is quite possible that no Ebola-infected case ever arrives in Pakistan. But it is just as possible that one such case does slip in undetected. Such an event will cause an outbreak of unimaginable proportions and needs to be prevented at all costs.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 7th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (8)
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Has Pakistan managed to protect its citizen from polio, a disease simple to control with oral vaccine? If Pakistan can't even do this, how can it control Ebola?
@sharabi: with opening of new international services at airport like Jaipur, Nagpur, Calicut, Indore. mangalore from Gulf country, the facility of screening, isolation, hospital is weak. Staff is more concerned about gold smuggling, Infectious disease control is a next priority.
@Rahul: Whey does ET post irrelevant comments? I believe commentators from India can get away with everything.
@bahadur khan @Miristan Sorry mate Actually India posses such capability, Actually there are very handful of Countries which have Level 4 systems Labs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biosafety_level
We do not have much traffic from Ebola effected areas. But We have 10,000 peace keeper working in West Africa. another two countries,Bangladesh and India have same number of peace keepers. working in West Africa. Indian also have civilian working in West Africa. India has much effected control on arrival passengers and they have quarantine system so far it is working for India.. Pakistan and Bangladesh we will leave it Allah.
Religious intolerance is more contagious than Ebola!
Name one thing that the govt is responsible for that really works well? By comparison polio is a simple disease to control and we all know how ineffective the govt has been in tackling that.
dear sir i dont think India/Pakistan have the medical infrastructures. or isolation facility. many staff are working in Nigeria,Mali for below gulf wages. This is supporting family in India/Pakistan. The workers may hide the infection fearing economic loss.