majority of the pediatrics who visit his hospital have infectious diseases like Hepatitis A, E, worm infectious diseases, gastro and diarrhea, and most of them belonged to a background where sewerage system was very poor or they had no clean drinking water facility. Even polio could spread from one person to another if the water is contaminated and it carries poliovirus.
“When a child is infected with wild poliovirus, the virus enters the body through the mouth and multiplies in the intestine. It is then shed into the environment through the faeces where it can spread rapidly through a community, especially in situations of poor hygiene and sanitation. Because of the poor sewerage system in the urban as well as rural areas, majority of the population is drinking contaminated water and this could be one of the reasons for the spread of poliovirus,” commented Dr. Azmat.
He said majority of the patients who receive waterborne infectious diseases are reported from rural areas, FATA or the urban areas where the sewerage and sanitation system is very poor.
Ayesha Raza Farooq, prime minister’s focal person on polio, when approached, said there could be risk of poliovirus spread where the sewerage system is poor but this doesn’t mean this is the cause of polio spread.
There are many other segments of poliovirus spread and challenges to control polio disease including low routine immunization performance, building trust and demand for OPV, limited availability of OPV, insecurity resulting in compromised access to children, gaps in adequately implementation of transit and migrant strategies, persistent pockets of refusals and failure to track and reach missed children after every SIA, she commented.
“In our Polio plus Strategy, we recommended and encourage the provincial governments for providing pure and clean drinking water facility, clean environment so that the poliovirus could not spread,” commented Miss Ayesha Raza.
Dr. Riffat Ayesha Anees, senior scientific officer in National Institute of Health while talking to The News said poliovirus could be transmitted or spread through fecal-oral route. She said many diseases including diarrhea, typhoid, Hepatitis A and E and cholera could spread through unclean or contaminated water. Similarly contaminated water could also cause polio if water contains poliovirus via sewerage system.
“Clean water is a basic right of human being and it is very important for a healthy kid. Primary school-going kids are the softest target of poliovirus and they need clean and pure drinking water and also the environment of the schools needed to be kept clean,” commented Dr Riffat.
Dr Amir Safdar, a public health expert, while talking to The News said the environment factor matters a lot in an endemic country like Pakistan. Normally poliovirus remains alive from 3 to 35 days and during this period if the virus is not eradicated then there are chances of its spread from one person to another through oral-fecal route. Those children whose immunity level is low can fall easy prey to this virus.