What's new

How to resolve Pakistan's polio crisis

farhanalee7

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Mar 29, 2014
Messages
251
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
20145121971652734_20.jpg

As the number of polio cases reached 74, the inevitable finally happened: The World Health Organization (WHO) imposed a six-month international travel restriction on Pakistanis to prevent the possible spread of the polio virus from Pakistan to other countries. Of the 74 cases registered worldwide, 59 occured in Pakistan.

The government is now left with no other option except to ensure that all people residing in Pakistan and long-term visitors receive a dose of oral polio vaccine (OPV) or inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) between four weeks and 12 months prior to travelling overseas.

The WHO slapped travel restrictions on Pakistanis after identifying Pakistan as one of three countries at risk of further spreading poliovirus to the rest of the world.

For the past few years, Pakistan's government has failed to reduce the numbers of polio cases to acceptable levels, despite WHO warnings. A number of campaigns for vaccinations across the country were not successful in eliminating the disease. The question is why?

Failure on many levels

Pakistan reached this embarrassing point for a number of reasons.

First, rumours and misconceptions about the polio vaccine have run free across the country. Some say that this vaccine is being used to control the birth rate and decrease women's fertility; others claim that it weakens children. Whatever the misconception, little has been done by the state to change people's minds about the vaccine. The high polio rates have been a failure of education, in a way.


People&Power - The one per cent solution
Second, failed services and negligence have also contributed to the problem. In a number of regions like Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) and remote regions of the Khyber Pakhtoonkhaw Province, anti-polio campaigns have used the expired vaccines scandal to discourage people from getting the vaccine. At the same time, in some areas suffering regular blackoutsrefrigeration and storage of the vaccine has been a challenge. Because of the systematic service provision failure of the government, some village leaders have taken to boycotting polio campaigns to pressure the authorities to take care of their electricity needs.

Third, it is also clear that the international community shares part of the blame. The fact that these organisations have focused only on polio, when babies need a set of nine vaccines has not been well received in Pakistan. Furthermore, revelations that Dr Shakil Afridi, who led a fake polio drive to help the CIA capture Osama bin Laden, worked for some UN agencies, has not helped the situation either. In fact, because continuous use of drones by the US in northern parts of the country, the Taliban decided to banany polio vaccination campaigns.

Fourth, the government has failed to protect anti-polio medical workers. Recent years have seen more than 100 attacks on polio teams and workers in which at least 50 polio workers lost their lives. Despite the frequency of attacks, none of the perpetrators have been identified or arrested by the security agencies. If the government was to show through commitment to eradicating polio from the country, it would put much more effort into protecting vaccination teams.

What needs to be done?

After the WHO imposed travel restrictions on Pakistan, the Khyber Pakthoonkhaw Province under the leadership of Imran Khan, former cricketer-turned-Pakistani-politician, launched a health programme called "Sehat Ka Insaaf" (Justice for Health). I have Peshawar with the "Sehat Ka Insaaf" organisers to observe their work, but in the two days of my stay there I did not see even a single polio team in the city. Campaign such as Sehat Ka Insaaf cannot end polio. All they can do is provide their leaders with the publicity and political gains they are hoping for.

A senior official at WHO's Pakistan office told me that the polio cases are concentrated in Peshawar, FATA and Karachi, while the rest of the country is polio free for now. With this in mind, it is time to revamp the polio vaccination drive and focus it on these areas experiencing high incidence.

The government should develop better security services for polio workers as well better plans to cope with the reach and penetration of vaccination campaign. Government officials should also try to engage regional and tribal leaders in this initiative to minimise security concerns and encourage local communities to trust the vaccination teams. An education campaign should focus dispelling negative misconceptions about the vaccine and explain what it exactly it does. Finally, the international community and organisations need to back the Pakistani government's efforts by providing funding and effective support on the ground that reflects the real needs of the population.

Only a sincere effort on the part of all stakeholders could help to eradicate polio from Pakistan.
How to resolve Pakistan's polio crisis - Opinion - Al Jazeera English
 
Dr Shakil Afridi, who led a fake polio drive to help the CIA capture Osama bin Laden, worked for some UN agencies, has not helped the situation either.
No wonder those tribal areas now buy any misconceptions! Retarded CIA should have gone with AIDS drive or something rather than fake polio drive!
 
No wonder those tribal areas now buy any misconceptions! Retarded CIA should have gone with AIDS drive or something rather than fake polio drive!

Afridi's program was for hepatitis, not polio. And NOT in FATA or KP.

13 May 2014 Last updated at 03:29 ET
WHO rejects Pakistan CIA fake vaccination claim
_74811343_74811339.jpg


The World Health Organisation has rejected Pakistan's claim UN agencies were involved in a CIA fake vaccination programme to trace Osama Bin Laden.

A doctor accused of running the 2011 programme to help confirm the al-Qaeda leader lived in Pakistan is in jail.

Last week the foreign ministry alleged that UN agencies were involved in the campaign, claiming it led the public to doubt genuine polio vaccination drives.

The WHO says Pakistani officials now accept the statement was made in error.

The global health agency recently warned that polio has re-emerged as a public health crisis. Pakistan is particularly badly affected as one of three countries where the virus is endemic.

But Pakistan has also struggled to prevent attacks against polio workers administering the campaign and the Taliban - who view the immunisation programme as a cover for Western spying - have banned vaccinations in the tribal region of North Waziristan.

Dr Shakil Afridi was accused of using the cover of a door-to-door vaccination campaign to help the US find Bin Laden in 2011.

He was convicted of alleged ties to militant groups and imprisoned in 2012 - a move widely seen as punishment for his alleged role in the Bin Laden raid, which he denies.

But days after the WHO's most recent statement on the re-emergence of polio, a foreign office spokesperson told reporters that suspicion fostered by the CIA's fake vaccination programme was a major reason behind the rise in polio.

The foreign office said: "A fake campaign of vaccination was conducted in Pakistan in which the UN agencies were also used."

But the WHO has disputed this, saying it was "deeply concerned by the circulation of an incorrect statement that was made during a press conference".

It said that the statement "wrongly and erroneously alleged the involvement of United Nations agencies in events conducted by Dr Shakeel Afridi".

But it went on to say that following the UN's formal objection, it had received assurances from the government that the foreign office statement was "categorically incorrect".

BBC News - WHO rejects Pakistan CIA fake vaccination claim


_____________________________________________


The Doctor, the CIA, and the Blood of Bin Laden

BY MATTHIEU AIKINS
January 2013

The locals had two names for it: the Big House and Waziristan House. Big House because of its unusual size, three stories tall in this one- or two-story suburb of Abbottabad, Pakistan. The second name was a kind of inside joke: Waziristan is a notoriously violent and remote area in the country's tribal regions, where the house's seldom-seen occupants had supposedly come from. Rumor had it they had settled in Abbottabad after fleeing a family vendetta.

The house belonged to two brothers, Arshad and Tariq Khan, who lived with their wives and kids, as well as a mysterious uncle who was said to be ill. They were a reclusive clan, which, it was true, wasn't all that unusual for conservative Pashtuns from the tribal areas. No one was invited inside the house's thirteen-foot walls, and apart from the kids, the family rarely ventured outside. But since building the place in 2005, they had never caused anyone any trouble, and the locals didn't ask too many questions. Better to live and let live in Pakistan these days.

Then, on April 21, 2011, a gray jeep pulled into town and parked in front of a property dealer's shack a short distance from the Big House. It was an official vehicle, with the logo of the provincial health department painted on the door, and from the passenger side stepped a doctor, here on business from the province's capital, Peshawar. In his collared shirt and pressed trousers, the doctor stood out among the wheat fields and dirt paths of this semi-rural suburb: a handsome, imposing man with a thick head of black hair, his filled-out frame a point of pride in a country where stunted growth can be a mark of the lower classes. Leaving his driver behind, the doctor set off along a narrow gravel-strewn path, beside fields thick with grass and dusky cauliflower leaves, his gaze focused intently on the house ahead.

Waiting for him outside the compound's forest-green metal gate were two nurses, Bakhto and Amna, their shawls drawn across their foreheads. All day, as part of a hepatitis B vaccination team that the doctor had assembled, the nurses had been canvassing the area, knocking on doors and looking for women ages 15 to 45 to cajole into taking the needle. First a drop of blood would be drawn from the patient and blotted on a rapid-test strip, which would show, within minutes, whether the patient had been infected with hepatitis. If the patient was negative, the nurses were instructed to administer the vaccination.

Normally a jovial man, the doctor seemed tense at the gate. Amna wondered why he was so interested in this house in particular, the only one whose vaccination he had bothered to personally supervise. She watched as he rapped sharply on the metal door. They waited. Again he knocked, but there seemed to be no one home. Amna shrugged. Did it really matter if they missed this one house? Undeterred, the doctor strode across the street to a low brick compound and roused a neighbor, whose son, as luck would have it, did the occasional odd job for the Big House. The man had the cell number of one of the Khan brothers. The doctor dialed it and handed his phone to one of the nurses, but when the brother answered and said the family was away on a trip, the doctor took the phone back from her.

"Hello?" he said. "This is Dr. Shakil Afridi." The doctor urgently explained the need for the hepatitis test. It was crucial that it happen soon. The vaccine, he said, would be very good for them.

How Shakil Afridi Helped the US Find Osama bin Laden
 
He is right api jaan :D
Aqal photi gi kiyea? Why do you want to murder your own ? Fair enough there are weirdos there...but arent they found everywhere!

Killing aint helping anyone!

ok then hydrogen bomb and multi nukes together for clean the earth from zombies

Hiroshima_aftermath.jpg
Uncle! We need to verify some tests can we try them on the other border end :pop:
 
Aqal photi gi kiyea? Why do you want to murder your own ? Fair enough there are weirdos there...but arent they found everywhere!

Killing aint helping anyone!


Uncle! We need to verify some tests can we try them on the other border end :pop:

photi? yaar urdu/punjabi na hi bolein ap to bahtar hai. Katal kardiya apne urdu ka. Second yaar aik bummb ka sawal ahi sab theek hojaenge jo bach gaya.
 
the best way to finish polio is to use different ways to explain ..
1. for educated peoples electronic media and news paper campaign is enough
2. for un-educated peoples ( non-religious ) , govt should make teams from their own peoples and send it to areas and tell them about the importance of polio .
3. for un-educated ( religious peoples , mostly talibans ) we should take KSA help to bring a Fatwa on polio vaccine , and if they still don't understand .... kill them
 
photi? yaar urdu/punjabi na hi bolein ap to bahtar hai. Katal kardiya apne urdu ka. Second yaar aik bummb ka sawal ahi sab theek hojaenge jo bach gaya.
Oay you fake Punjaban! :p: Phoota wa damagh ka nai kabhi suna?! :unsure:

No I am not gonna kill my own ....you can throw your bombs on the other side of the border

It is a virus and people do travel....carrying the virus as hosts! Man even some people are serious pests!

the best way to finish polio is to use different ways to explain ..
1. for educated peoples electronic media and news paper campaign is enough
2. for un-educated peoples ( non-religious ) , govt should make teams from their own peoples and send it to areas and tell them about the importance of polio .
3. for un-educated ( religious peoples , mostly talibans ) we should take KSA help to bring a Fatwa on polio vaccine , and if they still don't understand .... kill them
Though I still go for creating a gaseous vaccine...they dont wanna take oral one then Ahlan Wa Sahlan breathe it in!
 
Back
Top Bottom