
Pakistan reports two new polio cases, bringing 2025 tally to 10
The new cases have emerged ahead of the government launching a third nationwide campaign to vaccinate children under the age of five, scheduled from May. 26 to June 1. The campaign will target over 45.4 million children across 159 districts, including high-risk areas of southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where the new cases have been detected.
Polio is a paralyzing disease that has no cure. Multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine and completion of the routine vaccination schedule for all children under the age of 5 is essential to provide children high immunity against the disease.
'The Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health has confirmed two new cases of wild poliovirus in District Lakki Marwat and District Bannu, South Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,' the body said in a statement.
'With these latest detections, the total number of confirmed polio cases in Pakistan in 2025 has risen to 10, five from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, four from Sindh, and one from Punjab.'
The statement said while polio vaccination campaigns continued nationwide, with two already held in 2025, certain areas, particularly in southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, faced challenges such as restricted access and difficulties in conducting house-to-house vaccination drives.
'These access and operational hurdles leave thousands of children particularly in South KP at risk of exposure to poliovirus as a result of missed opportunities for vaccination,' the statement said.
Due to ongoing access constraints and community concerns, children in UC Bakhmal Ahmad Zai (Lakki Marwat) missed out on vaccination opportunities during the February and April 2025 immunization campaigns, resulting in immunity gaps.
In UC Saintanga, Tehsil Wazir (Bannu), no comprehensive campaign had been implemented since October 2023. Limited access, shortage of female vaccinators, and gaps in monitoring had contributed to immunity gaps, leaving children at continued risk of poliovirus transmission.
'The Pakistan Polio Eradication Program is actively engaging with all stakeholders to address operational and access challenges and to enhance the effectiveness of vaccination campaigns in these high-risk areas. An intensified vaccination schedule is being implemented to interrupt virus transmission and protect children from lifelong paralysis,' the polio program added.
In the early 1990s, Pakistan reported around 20,000 polio cases annually but in 2018 the number dropped to eight cases. Six cases were reported in 2023 and only one in 2021.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries in the world where polio remains endemic.
Pakistan's polio program began in 1994 but efforts to eradicate the virus have since been undermined by vaccine misinformation and opposition from some religious hard-liners who say immunization is a foreign ploy to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western spies.
Militant groups also frequently attack and kill members of polio vaccine teams and security guards protecting them.
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Arab News
a day ago
- Arab News
How Gaza's hospitals became a battleground against Israeli bombs and hunger
LONDON: In Gaza's overwhelmed hospitals, doctors, nurses and other medical staff are battling against what many fear could be their most insurmountable challenge in nearly two years of Israel's war on the territory's people — hunger. 'We go to work sometimes without eating and we treat patients while actually feeling dizzy, lightheaded and weak,' said Dr. Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, a physician working in the territory. 'The starvation is not just hitting families in Gaza it's hitting the health workers too.' Gaza's health sector has been decimated by Israel's devastating military assault. Hospitals have been bombed, doctors killed and detained, and medical supplies cut off. Beleaguered and bloodied, health care workers are now locked in a daily struggle against hunger and malnutrition affecting people across the entire territory. If the medical staff cannot eat and are not strong enough to perform the painstaking work needed to treat a battered and malnourished population, the situation can only deteriorate. In accounts provided to Arab News from medical charities, hospital workers have described their daily struggles to find enough food to sustain them through their long shifts and feed their families. They describe colleagues fainting at work, struggling to continue their lifesaving care for those bombed, starved and shot at as they try to reach the meagre food supplies making it into the territory. Abu Mughaisib, who is the deputy medical coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontieres in Gaza, said that despite the decades of conflict affecting the territory, he never imagined such a situation. He said most days he and his colleagues eat only one basic meal of bread with canned food or lentils. Some days the market is completely empty, and there are never any vegetables, fruit, or meat. 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'Our emergency ward is overwhelmed with people who haven't eaten for days and are in urgent need of IV fluids. In over 21 months of operating under crisis, we've never seen days like these.' Summer Al-Jamal, a finance and admin assistant for MAP based at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza, described the situation there as 'deeply distressing.' The hospital has been inundated with victims from shooting attacks on Palestinians gathered at aid distribution hubs nearby, as well as patients injured from Israeli bombings, or who are sick. Increasingly, they have been treating malnourished families and their children. 'The hospital is heavily burdened with departments overwhelmed by trauma cases and critically injured patients,' she said after a recent visit to the facility. 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Of the 36 hospitals in the territory before Israel's current war on Gaza, only 18 remain partially operational, and less than 40 percent of primary health care facilities are still functional, according to the World Health Organization. All the facilities have been damaged and are flooded with patients far beyond their maximum operating capacities. Gaza's Health Ministry says Israeli forces have killed more than 1,500 Palestinian health workers since October 2023, with the WHO recording at least 700 attacks on health care facilities in the territory. Doctors and hospital staff have been detained, and more than 10,000 critically ill patients need to be evacuated. And then there is the dwindling medical supplies. Israel imposed a complete 11-week blockade on Gaza in March, leading to desperate shortages of medicines and equipment for hospitals, along with basic food for the entire population. The main UN agency distributing aid was forced to stop operating and was eventually replaced by the US- and Israeli-run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Some supplies have resumed but at a fraction of what aid agencies say is required. The dire situation for the health sector was further exacerbated by the sharp increase in casualties last month as Israel ramped up its campaign in the face of an international outcry and widespread accusations of genocide. The WHO reported 13,500 injuries in Gaza in July — the highest since the first three months of Israel's war on the territory. Many of these took place when Israeli troops repeatedly opened fire on crowds of Palestinians as they waited to collect food from GHF distribution points. Amid all the carnage, the shortage of food means Gaza's people are now dying from starvation. Late last month, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a global initiative that analyses food security, warned that the 'worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in Gaza.' The body said there would be 'widespread death' without immediate action. The Gaza Health Ministry said on Monday that 263 Palestinians had died of malnutrition and starvation, including 112 children, since the war started. Images of emaciated children being treated at hospitals have shocked the global community in recent weeks. Israeli officials have claimed the numbers are inflated and that the children died from pre-existing health conditions. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dismissed reports of severe hunger as Hamas 'lies' and insisted last week there is 'no policy of starvation.' His claims are at odds with those of doctors working in the territory, who have seen a surge in severe malnutrition cases. 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'Even health workers, already stretched to their physical and mental limits, are working long hours on little food, growing weaker as shortages persist,' Dr. Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO representative for the occupied Palestinian territory, told Arab News. 'No one can sustain this, yet they keep showing up because patients have no one else. We call for large-scale aid, including diverse and nutritious food, to be allowed via all routes.' Support for Gaza's medical teams has also come from more than 100 fellow health workers around the world who have spent time working in the territory during the conflict. Last week they signed a letter expressing solidarity with their Palestinian colleagues as they are 'starved and shot by Israel' as part of a 'methodical attack' of the health system. 'Doctors, nurses, and first responders are all rapidly losing weight due to forced starvation at the hands of the Israeli government,' the letter stated. 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'Mothers are dehydrated and unable to breastfeed, and pregnant women are suffering complications and are at increased risk of miscarriage. Malnourished patients are deteriorating. 'Without urgent intervention, more lives will be lost.'


Arab News
a day ago
- Arab News
Disease, hunger, war: Sudan's overlooked emergency
The toll of the war in Sudan goes far beyond damaged infrastructure and lost lives — it has inflicted deep wounds on the dignity of its people. Families are torn apart, healthcare systems lie in ruins, and routine medical care has become a distant memory. The conflict has turned everyday survival into a monumental challenge; civilians face violence, displacement, hunger, and illness without access to even basic health services. This unfolding tragedy not only undermines the past sense of normalcy but also erodes hope. The inability to care for the sick and vulnerable assaults the core of human dignity. Hospitals have been attacked, clinics looted and occupied, and health workers have either fled, been threatened, or paid with their lives. These are not just physical injuries — this is a psychological blow to a nation's spirit. Over the past two years, the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces has turned critical portions of the health system into ghost towns. Almost 38 percent of health facilities have been rendered nonfunctional, and just 14 percent of hospitals still operate at full capacity, according to assessments by the World Health Organization's HeRAMS monitoring program. Khartoum — once the heartbeat of Sudan's health services, providing close to 70 percent of national care — has been particularly devastated. In many areas, medical facilities lie in ruins, with equipment destroyed or looted, and essential supply chains severed. Physical buildings are one thing, but the collapse of system-wide structure is far worse. Laboratories have shut down, pharmacies stand empty, vaccine cold chains have failed, and even simple medicines like antibiotics or insulin are scarce. Without trained staff, even basic functions like triage or sanitation are impossible. Women face childbirth without skilled attendants; patients with chronic conditions, such as diabetes, hypertension, or kidney disease, are ignored. The interruption of services for dialysis, antenatal care, and trauma threatens countless lives every day. On top of this devastation, Sudan is in the grip of multiple, overlapping epidemics. Cholera has spread to almost all of the country's states, overwhelming treatment centers, particularly in Darfur, where the toll has been especially heavy. Measles, once controlled through routine immunization, is surging, with almost 10,000 cases treated by Medecins Sans Frontieres clinics between June 2024 and May 2025. Hundreds of thousands of children have not received any vaccines, leaving them vulnerable to preventable diseases. Malaria cases are also surging, though true numbers are likely underreported due to collapsed surveillance systems. 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Al Arabiya
a day ago
- Al Arabiya
US pediatric group recommends COVID-19 vaccines for young children
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