
Pakistan's latest polio case deals blow to eradication campaign
The virus was detected in a 23-month-old child from Diamer district in the Gilgit-Baltistan region, according to the country's polio eradication programme. This is Pakistan 's 11th case since January this year, despite the launch of several immunisation drives.
The case was reported after a polio eradication team came under fire on Sunday, police said.
According to local police, unknown armed men opened fire on the polio team in Sheikho village of the Tangir Valley, accusing them of 'ruining the environment' through the health campaign. The vehicle of the team was stopped at the RCC bridge.
'You all are ruining the environment here by bringing [unveiled] women from Gilgit in the name of the polio campaign. If you do this again, you won't be able to escape,' the armed gunmen said, according to Dawn.
The shots fired by them punctured the tyres of the polio team's vehicle, the police said.
Regional officials said they were aware of the incident and had ordered strict action. Faizullah Faraq, spokesperson for the Gilgit-Baltistan administration, said the chief minister had taken note of the firing.
He added that the polio monitoring team was moved to a safe location immediately after the incident. He said the incident occurred because the polio team had gone to the area 'without informing the police'.
Authorities were still trying to determine how the poliovirus, initially found in the southern port city of Karachi, had infected the child in Diamer, Mohammad Iqbal, a director at the polio programme in the northwest, said.
Thousands of tourists from Karachi and elsewhere visit resorts in Gilgit-Baltistan during the summer season.
The latest case emerged after Pakistan wrapped up its third nationwide polio vaccination drive of the year on Sunday, aiming to immunize 45 million children.
Pakistan and its neighbour Afghanistan are the only two countries where the spread of the wild polio virus has not been stopped, according to the World Health Organization.
There are ongoing outbreaks of polio linked to the oral vaccine in 10 other countries, mostly in Africa.
Pakistan has faced vaccine hesitancy and misinformation campaigns which have slowed progress in eradicating the disease.
Healthcare workers and police assigned to protect them are sometimes targeted by gunmen who falsely claim the polio vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilise children.
Since the 1990s, attacks on polio vaccination teams in the country have killed over 200 workers and security personnel.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Hull Royal Infirmary epilepsy nurses see their work go nationwide
Work by a team of nurses at Hull Royal Infirmary has been adopted by a national epilepsy charity to help young Action has published a series of leaflets aimed at teenagers, parents of children with additional needs and people who require documents that are easy to content is based on booklets created by children's epilepsy nurses Fiona Lead, Nicky Heenan, Carys Amies and Chris Bennett, who are all based at the Hull hospital."The content for the booklets took us about a year to develop [and] another year to tweak, and we've been using them for the past three years to provide structure and consistency [in our] epilepsy clinics," said Ms Lead. The leaflets are intended to support young people as they make the move from child-focused, paediatric care to adult neurology or epilepsy Lead said studies showed the move from children's services to adult services could be very challenging for young people with a long-term health condition."It's common to see a big dip in their overall health and for young people and their families to feel like they've been abandoned, but providing a structured transition programme is widely acknowledged to help avoid some of these issues," she said."To have our content form the basis of nationwide resources for families and young people, we jumped at the chance."It was a real compliment, and it's great to know that the work we have done here in Hull, influenced by the many children, families and young people that we care for, is now helping to inform and support thousands of other families across the country who are living with epilepsy." Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and iPad or Google Play for Android devices


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
New prostate cancer exam opens door to screening
A new system to detect prostate cancer could help pave the way for the introduction of screening. The model, introduced at the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation trust, means men with suspected disease get a far more comprehensive assessment before undergoing scans. This reduces the number of false positives and spares more men from undergoing needless biopsies. The Telegraph is campaigning for the introduction of targeted screening, so those most at risk, such as black men and those with a family history of disease, are offered PSA tests. The UK National Screening Committee (UK NSC) – which is currently considering whether to recommend the rollout of testing – has previously rejected the idea because of concern that PSA tests are too unreliable, and would result in too many men undergoing needless procedures. But technology used to confirm a diagnosis has significantly improved in recent years. At the Marsden, the new model has meant rates of detection of 'significant cancer' – higher-grade disease which would warrant treatment – have risen from 27 per cent to 52 per cent. Because so many cases are filtered out earlier, average time from referral to MRI decreased from nine days to three days under the new model. Experts said innovations like the 'Speed pathway' (superior prostate experience and efficient diagnostics) could prove crucial in helping the NHS to introduce screening without putting too many men through invasive procedures. Dr Netty Kinsella, nurse consultant in uro-oncology at the Marsden, said the new system was 'fundamentally a triage optimisation model – directing high-risk patients through rapid MRI and biopsy, while sparing low-risk or inappropriate cases from unnecessary investigation.' She said: 'This both improves diagnostic accuracy and frees capacity for those most likely to benefit.' The Speed pathway involves a detailed initial clinical history, physical examination and urinary assessment ahead of MRI scans. It also uses AI-assisted imaging for more precise diagnosis. The checks mean other benign conditions affecting the prostate – and urine infections – are more likely to be detected early, ruling out more cases without an MRI or biopsy.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
East Kent trial sees A&E visits drop by nearly 70% for group
A&E visits for a group of patients with complex health conditions in an area of Kent have dropped by almost 70% following a trial, an NHS trust Community Health NHS Foundation Trust said care services in east Kent worked to identify people who most frequently used A&E departments or walk-in centres to see if they could be helped to manage their health at patients were monitored remotely with devices to record weight, blood pressure, temperature or blood oxygen levels, before data was sent to clinicians who decided if extra help was trial also saw a 70% reduction in emergency hospital admissions and a 4% reduction in walk-in centre visits. The East Kent Health and Care Partnership led the efforts and focused on patients living in the area who were frail and living with complex health needs. The group of 1,500 patients also answered questions about how well they were feeling, if they had any falls and what their appetite was taking part in the trial, patients reported reduced anxiety, greater confidence in managing their health and feeling better supported to stay well at Sarah Phillips, chief medical officer at the trust, said: "When we looked at the data, we discovered just 3% of east Kent residents accounted for nearly 12% of all A&E department attendances and 18.5% of emergency admissions."