the virus.
The IMB report terms Peshawar to be the hub and a “conveyer belt” for the spread of polio in Pakistan, stating that the wild polio virus was being transmitted to other parts of the country from the Peshawar. The report also pointed out that the polio virus was circulating in the environment in Karachi, especially in areas with poor sanitation, despite extensive vaccination drives.
On the other hand, an independent experts’ committee constituted by the World Health Organization (WHO) has also extended temporary travel recommendations for Pakistan for another three months.
The committee of experts met on November 10, 2015, and had a teleconference with Pakistani officials, termed the country to be endemic for polio and recommended for continuing the travel recommendations for Pakistan.
Every Pakistani citizens travelling abroad has to gulp down two drops of the Oral Polio Vaccine and acquire a vaccination certification.
This year, a total of 41 polio cases emerged from Pakistan, with six cases from Sindh. Two cases have been reported from Karachi, two from Dadu district and one each from Kambar-Shahdadkot and Sukkur districts.
Last year, Pakistan broke its own record of the most number of polio cases reported in a year when 306 cases emerged in 2014, and the country also came under the limelight for exporting the virus to Middle Eastern countries, compelling the WHO to slap travel restrictions on Pakistani travellers.
Dr Usman Chachar, the coordinator in Sindh for the Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) for Polio confirmed that another child in Karachi had tested positive for the crippling disease and termed it a “sad development”. He said the EOC teams were investigating the incident.
He stressed every possible measure was being taken to eradicate polio from Sindh with vaccination in almost all the areas of the province, especially Karachi. He said the emergence of such cases, instead of demoralising the polio teams, further strengthened their resolve to eliminate their menace from the country.