Photo: UNICEF Pakistan/Asad Zaidi. Marking the finger of a child after administering the polio in Khairpur district, Sindh province
ISLAMABAD, 29 September 2014 (IRIN) - Pakistan is heading for one of its
worst years for polio in recent times. According to figures from the
Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), 166 cases of polio have been
verified this year, compared to 28 at the same time last year.
This puts the country at significant risk of crossing the 199-mark
officially recorded in 2000, or the 198 seen in 2011. It is a major setback
for a country that as recently as 2005 saw just 28 cases, with
everything seemingly on track for polio eradication. Last year there
were 93 cases in the country, according to the GPEI.
The worst affected areas,
according to State Minister for the National Health Service (NHS),
Saira Afzal Tarar, are the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province (KP), where militants often prevent
vaccination.
“Pakistan presents one of the most complex polio eradication
environments in the world,” Ban Khalid Al-Dhayi, spokesperson for UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF), told IRIN. “In the areas that remain with
poliovirus, there is inaccessibility, violence, misconceptions and
misinformation that circulates every day, along with intricate tribal
and cultural norms and systems.”
“Massive daily population movements” were also described as a major problem by UNICEF.
Al-Dhayi said the recent movement of more than one million internally
displaced persons (IDPs) following the military operation in North
Waziristan Agency had raised fears of the virus spreading to areas which
had not previously seen infections. More than 400,000 children were
vaccinated at transit points as they moved out of the conflict zone in
FATA and settled in host communities in KP, Punjab and Sindh.
IDPs who settled in parts of Punjab due to ongoing floods could also increase risks.
While KP health officials based at the Provincial Polio Control Room
(PPCR) in Peshawar agree the IDP influx poses a polio risk, they
disagree, according to media reports, that refusals (those refusing to be vaccinated) are declining, and blame UN communications authorities for this.
According to PPCR data, the number of refusals increased from 4,200
during the polio vaccination drive carried out between 6-8 June, to
12,043 during the vaccination campaign run from 23-25 June. UNICEF,
however, says they have separately seen a sharp fall in the rate of
refusals, and claim successes for social mobilization and awareness
raising.
IDPs themselves appear keen to receive the drops: “I was desperate for
my three young children to get them, and queued up with many others when
vaccinators got here,” said Aziz Dawar, who fled North Waziristan in
mid-June. He told IRIN his three children aged 8-2 had till now received
no vaccinations.
Weak prevention systems
On 1 June Pakistan enforced a WHO recommendation
- seen as draconian by some - that anyone travelling overseas from
Pakistan had to produce certification that they had received polio
drops, to prevent the export of the virus.
Prior to this move, the emergency coordinator for polio eradication in
Pakistan, Elias Durry, explained to IRIN that Pakistan had “informally
been labelled” as an “exporter of polio” when strains of the virus
originating from the country were found in China, Syria, Egypt, Israel
and Palestine. “There needs to be no more import/export of polio virus
for at least six months,” Durry said.
While officially polio teams are set up at airports to administer vaccination drops, in reality implementation has been reportedly patchy, with travellers saying they had been able to travel without receiving the drops.
“It’s all just on paper. No one really bothers with drops or
certificates in reality,” an official who asked not to be named told
IRIN from Lahore Airport. Shortages of vaccines have also held back anti-polio campaigns.
Responding to this, NHS minister Saira Afzal Tarar told IRIN: “A loan
from the Islamic Development Bank that I had been campaigning for has
now been obtained, so we should be able to deliver drops more
efficiently.” The minister said the precise loan details, including the
amount, were still being finalised.
Wrong approach?
“Our approach is not right,” Anita Zaidi, head of paediatrics at
Karachi’s Aga Khan Hospital, told IRIN. She said the lone focus on polio
had had a negative effect, and that the vaccine should be given
alongside others.
At ground level, the message is still struggling to be heard.
“Why don’t we do something to stop our children from being crippled by
this terrible disease?” asked Azra Bibi in Bannu, whose cousin’s infant
son caught polio five years ago and can now barely walk. “We keep
hearing of more and more cases. She said she herself had to battle her
parents-in-law to get her two daughters vaccinated.
“They said the drops would make them sterile, but I spoke to doctors and
also school teachers who are educated, and I know this is a lie,” said
Azra, who now regularly visits an IDP camp to encourage mothers to
vaccinate against polio.
“I want to keep our children safe,” she said.