
The world nearly beat polio. But fake records, imperfect vaccine, missteps aided its comeback
Remove Ads
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
For the past decade, Sughra Ayaz has travelled door to door in southeastern Pakistan, pleading with parents to allow children to be vaccinated against polio to wipe out the paralytic disease.She hears their demands and fears. Some are practical - families need basics like food and water more than vaccines.Amid rampant misinformation and immense pressure for the campaign to succeed, Ayaz said, some managers have instructed workers to falsely mark children as immunised. And the vaccines, which must be kept cold, aren't always stored correctly, she added.The World Health Organisation and partners embarked on their polio campaign in 1988 with the bold goal of eradication - a feat seen only once for human diseases, with smallpox in 1980. They came close several times, including in 2021, when just five cases of the natural virus were reported in Pakistan and Afghanistan. But since then, cases rebounded, hitting 99 last year, and officials missed at least six self-imposed eradication deadlines.Afghanistan and Pakistan remain the only countries where transmission of polio.But in its quest to eliminate the disease, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative has been derailed by mismanagement and what insiders describe as blind allegiance to an outdated strategy, according to workers, polio experts and internal materials obtained by The Associated Press.Officials have falsified vaccination records, selected unqualified people to dole out drops, failed to send out teams during mass campaigns, and dismissed concerns about the oral vaccinesparking outbreaks according to documents shared with AP by staffers from GPEI - one of the largest public health campaigns, with over USD 20 billion spent and nearly every country in the world involved.Officials tout the successes - 3 billion children vaccinated, an estimated 20 million people who would have been paralysed spared - while acknowledging challenges in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Remote villages are hard to reach, some cultural and religious authorities instruct against vaccination, and hundreds of polio workers and security staff have been killed because of their alignment with a Western-led initiative.Dr. Jamal Ahmed, WHO's polio director, defended progress in those two countries, citing workers' tailored response in resistant pockets.Ahmed said he believes authorities will end the spread of polio in the next 12 to 18 months. Its latest goal for eradication is 2029. The campaign says about 45 million children in Pakistan and 11 million in Afghanistan must be vaccinated this year. Children typically need four doses of two drops each to be considered fully immunised.Dr. Zulfiqar Bhutta, who has served on advisory groups for WHO, the Gates Foundation and others, said campaign officials should listen to the criticism of its tactics.Documents show years-long problems on polio vaccination teams.The documents flagged multiple cases of falsified vaccination records, health workers being replaced by untrained relatives and workers improperly administering vaccines.On numerous occasions, WHO officials noted, "vaccinators did not know about vaccine management," citing failure to keep doses properly cold. They also found sloppy or falsified reporting, with workers noting "more used vaccine vials than were actually supplied."According to an August 2017 report from Kandahar, Afghanistan, local government authorities and others interfered in choosing vaccinators, "resulting in the selection of underage and illiterate volunteers."Vaccination teams worked "in a hurried manner," reports said.A team in Nawzad, Afghanistan, covered just half of the intended area in 2017, with 250 households missed entirely. Village elders said no one visited for at least two years.Vaccine workers and health officials in Afghanistan and Pakistan confirmed the issues in the documents and told AP it's hard for campaign leadership to grasp the difficulties in the field. Door-to-door efforts are stymied by cultural barriers, unfounded stories about vaccines, and the region's poverty and transience.In an email response to AP's questions about officials' knowledge of the issues, WHO polio director Ahmed noted "operational challenges" in Afghanistan and Pakistan and said the program has "robust monitoring and evaluation processes."Ayaz described "fake finger marking" - placing the ink used to show a child is vaccinated on their pinky even when no vaccine has been given.Critics point to the continued use of the oral polio vaccine.Before the first polio vaccine was developed in 1955, the disease - spread mostly from person to person, through contaminated water and via faecal particles - was among the world's most feared, paralysing hundreds of thousands of children annually.Polio is mainly spread when people are exposed to water infected with the virus. In countries with poor sanitation, children often become infected when they come into contact with contaminated waste.WHO says that as long as a single child remains infected, kids everywhere are at risk.Eradication demands near-perfection - zero polio cases and immunising more than 95 per cent of children.The oral vaccine - proven to be safe and effective - has been given to more than 3 billion children. But there are some extremely rare side effects: Scientists estimate that for every 2.7 million first doses given, one child will be paralysed by the live polio virus in the vaccine.In even rarer instances, the live virus can mutate into a form capable of starting new outbreaks among unimmunized people where vaccination rates are low.Worldwide, several hundred vaccine-derived cases have been reported annually since at least 2021, with at least 98 this year.Most public health experts agree the oral vaccine should be pulled as soon as possible. But they acknowledge there simply isn't enough injectable vaccine - which uses no live virus and doesn't come with the risks of the oral vaccine - to wipe out polio alone. The injectable vaccine is also more expensive and requires more training to administer.Dr. Tom Frieden, a former director of the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention who sits on an independent board reviewing polio eradication, said it would be impossible to eliminate polio without the oral vaccine. But he's urged authorities to find ways to adapt, such as adopting new methods to identify polio cases more quickly. Since 2011, he and colleagues have issued regular reports about overall program failures.Last year, former WHO scientist Dr. T. Jacob John twice emailed WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, calling for a course correction. John shared the emails with AP and said he's received no response.In his response to AP, WHO polio director Ahmed said the oral vaccine is a "core pillar" of the eradication strategy and that "almost every country that is polio-free today used (it) to achieve that milestone."Ahmed also pointed to the success the WHO and partners had in eliminating polio from India, once considered a nearly impossible task. In the four years before polio was wiped out there, health workers delivered about 1 billion doses of the oral vaccine to more than 170 million children.Today, nearly all of the world's polio cases -- mostly in Africa and the Middle East -- are mutated viruses from the oral vaccine, except for Afghanistan and Pakistan.Scott Barrett, a Columbia University professor, called for an inquiry into how things went so wrong, particularly with a failed effort in 2016, when authorities removed a strain from the oral vaccine. They miscalculated, leading to outbreaks in more than 40 countries that paralysed more than 3,000 children, according to an expert report commissioned by WHO. Last year, a mutated virus traced to that effort paralysed a baby in Gaza.Mistrust of the polio eradication effort persists.With an annual budget of about USD 1 billion, the polio initiative is among the most expensive in all of public health. This year, the US withdrew from the WHO, and President Donald Trump has cut foreign aid. WHO officials have privately admitted that sustaining funding would be difficult without success.Some say the money would be better spent on other health needs."We have spent more than USD 1 billion in the last five years in Pakistan alone, and it didn't buy us any progress," said Roland Sutter, who formerly led polio research at WHO.Villagers, too, have protested the cost, staging hundreds of boycotts of immunisation campaigns since 2023. Instead of polio vaccines, they ask for medicine, food and electricity.In Karachi, locals told AP they didn't understand the government's fixation on polio and complained of other issues - dirty water, heroin addiction. Workers are accompanied by armed guards; Pakistani authorities say more than 200 workers and police assigned to protect them have been killed since the 1990s, mostly by militants.The campaign is also up against a wave of misinformation, including that the vaccine is made from pig urine or will make children reach puberty early. Some blame an anti-vaccine sentiment growing in the US and other countries that have largely funded eradication efforts and say it's reaching even remote areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan.In suburban southwest Pakistan, Saleem Khan, 58, said two grandchildren under 5 were vaccinated over his family's objections."It results in disability," said Khan, without citing evidence for his belief.Svea Closser, professor of international health at Johns Hopkins University, said Pakistan and Afghanistan were less resistant to immunisation decades ago. Now, people are angry about the focus on polio and lack of help for diseases like measles or tuberculosis, she said, spurring conspiracy theories.In a mountainous region of southeastern Afghanistan where most people survive by growing wheat and raising cows and chickens, a mother of five said she'd prefer that her children be vaccinated against polio, but her husband and other male relatives have instructed their families to reject it. They believe the false rumours that it will compromise their children's fertility.
Hashtags

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


News18
36 minutes ago
- News18
AI-based platform HUMETA goes global; to expand services in UAE, US
New Delhi, Aug 8 (PTI) Home-grown HealthPresso TechnoMedia on Friday said the services of its AI-based healthcare content creation platform HUMETA will now be available in the UAE and the US. To fund the expansion, the company is also raising USD 2 million in its pre seed funding round after successfully completing an Angel Investing round of USD 300k in July 2025. The platform delivers multi-format, multilingual, regulation-ready content for every medical specialty — from CME modules and discharge summaries to patient explainers and scientific publications — all aligned with FDA, EMA, and CDSCO guidelines. Trained on over 3.5 million verified medical datasets and built on proprietary Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) architecture, HUMETA is designed for medical precision, according to a statement by HealthPresso TechnoMedia which created HUMETA. 'With our expansion, we're now enabling content creation at the point of care in UAE — through hospital networks, clinics, and standalone specialty centers — and in the USA, where we're working with medical associations and pharma brands to ensure every piece of healthcare communication is grounded in accuracy and governance," said Daleep Manhas, CEO and Co-Founder of HUMETA. According to HealthPresso TechnoMedia, only 15–20 per cent of doctors actively contribute to health content management, with nearly 10 million out of 12 million physicians remaining passive. In India, fewer than 5 per cent of 1.2 million registered allopathic doctors create content, despite the country producing over 50,000 new MBBS graduates each year. This participation gap restricts the impact of pharma, hospital, and MedTech communications, the statement said, adding HUMETA is purpose-built to activate this silent 80 per cent. 'The danger isn't just in what's missing, it's in what's misrepresented. HUMETA brings order to this chaos. A platform that understands clinical nuance, complies with regulations, and empowers every healthcare actor to create credible, intelligent communication," said Siddhant Srivastava, Co-founder and Partner- Business Growth. 'We built HUMETA with a singular focus — to make healthcare content credible, scalable, and intelligent," said Manuj Sanduja, Chief Technology Officer. 'We are not just building a product — we're creating the central nervous system of global healthcare communication, making the ultimate 'go-to' platform that no healthcare entity can afford to ignore", added Sanduja, Co-founder & CTO, HUMETA. PTI PLB DRR view comments First Published: August 08, 2025, 14:45 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.


NDTV
4 hours ago
- NDTV
All You Need To Know About Netanyahu's Plan To Retake Gaza City
Israel announced early Friday that it plans to take over Gaza City, the largest urban area in the territory and one that has already suffered extensive devastation in repeated Israeli raids. Another major ground operation in one of the few areas of Gaza not already under evacuation orders would likely spark even more mass displacement and further disrupt efforts to deliver desperately needed food in the territory, where experts have warned that famine is unfolding. Israel has faced mounting calls from many of its closest allies to end the war, and the plan faces opposition within Israel from families of the remaining 20 or so living hostages held by Hamas and members of the security establishment who say there is little to gain militarily at this point. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says more military pressure is needed to achieve Israel's goals of returning the hostages and destroying Hamas. Israel has repeatedly bombarded Gaza City and launched major ground operations there within weeks of Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack that triggered the war. Several neighbourhoods and key infrastructure have been almost completely destroyed. It was Gaza's most populous city on the eve of the war, home to some 700,000 people, about the population of Washington, DC. Hundreds of thousands fled under Israeli evacuation orders at the start of the war but many returned during a ceasefire earlier this year. Israel already controls and has largely destroyed around 75% of Gaza, with most of the population of some 2 million Palestinians now sheltering in Gaza City, the central city of Deir al-Balah and the sprawling displacement camps in the Muwasi area along the coast. Israel's offensive has already killed over 61,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not say how many were fighters or civilians. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. The UN and independent experts view its figures as the most reliable estimate of war casualties. Israel disputes them but has not provided its own. Another major ground operation will almost certainly lead to the killing of more Israeli soldiers in hit-and-run attacks, eroding domestic support for the war, and could endanger the remaining hostages. Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in the October 7 attack and abducted 251 hostages. Most have since been released in ceasefires or other deals. Fifty remain inside the territory, around 20 of whom are believed by Israel to be alive. Palestinian militants have released videos in recent days showing emaciated hostages, saying they are suffering the same starvation as the Palestinian population. Hamas is believed to be holding the hostages in tunnels and other secret locations and has hinted it will kill them if Israeli forces draw near. Former security officials have also spoken out against further military operations, saying there is little to gain after Hamas has been militarily decimated. Israel's military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, reportedly argued during a Security Cabinet meeting that a more sweeping plan to retake all of Gaza would endanger the hostages and put added strain on the army after two years of regional wars. Israel has come under mounting international pressure in recent weeks as images of starving children have shone a light on the worsening hunger crisis. Twenty-eight Western-aligned nations, including some of its closest allies, called for it to end the war last month. Even President Donald Trump, the strongest supporter it has ever had in the White House, has expressed concern about the hunger crisis. He has said he wants to end the war and return all the hostages, but also that it's up to Israel to decide its next moves. Israel has dismissed the criticism, saying it has done everything it can to limit harm to civilians and blaming Hamas for their deaths. Netanyahu has denied there is starvation in Gaza despite eyewitness testimony, data compiled by experts and dire warnings from United Nations officials and major international aid groups operating there. Netanyahu has said more military pressure is needed to get Hamas to agree to release the hostages and surrender. But Hamas has already withstood one of the deadliest and most destructive military campaigns since World War II. The militant group says it will only release the remaining hostages in return for a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal. (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


Time of India
6 hours ago
- Time of India
THIS anxiety calming technique really works, and is super easy to do!
Anxiety disorders are still among the most prevalent mental disorders. WHO states that already in 2019, it has influenced 301 million individuals, or around 1 in 4 individuals suffering from anxiety disorders who undergo treatment for it. As per the research article "Panic Attack–Associated Psychophysiological and Cognitive Mechanisms and the Influence of the Diving Reflex", anxiety has been explained not only as a state of mind, but also as a physical and cognitive state that engages the body's stress mechanisms, particularly during panic attacks. What is anxiety An increased state of arousal, engaging both your mind and body. It usually comes with: Racing thoughts Shortness of breath A feeling of fear Increased heart rate During this attack, your sympathetic nervous system overacts and this overact results in; Increased heart rate (tachycardia) Rapid breathing (hyperventilation) Increased sensitivity to carbon dioxide (which causes breathing to be more labored due to panic) Although there are many other various techniques that individuals use to relieve their anxiety but this new technique is tested results and this is referred to as the "dive reflex" technique How does the dive reflex technique function Anxiety can get your heart pounding, chest constricting and your mind racing. In the midst of such situations, to relax becomes almost impossible. However, there is one very strong natural reflex that can assist: the mammalian dive reflex. It is your body's own safety switch and amazingly, it is easy to trigger. What is this technique? The dive reflex is one of the body's protective mechanisms that are triggered when your face is splashed with cold water when you're holding your breath. It's shared by us and other mammals, such as dolphins and seals. The purpose of the reflex is to save oxygen and shield essential organs from damage when the body believes it's underwater. But here's the surprise: inducing the dive reflex doesn't only assist in survival when underwater, but it also relaxes your nervous system. Why is it effective for anxiety? When we are anxious, our body responds as if it is actually in danger, even though nothing is amiss; our heart begins to thud, breathing becomes rapid and shallow and everything appears more intense than it already does. The dive reflex has the effect of flipping that switch. When your face meets cold water and you refuse to breathe, your body gets the message to slow down. Your heartbeat slows, your breath calms, and within seconds, you feel a little more centered. It's like an in-built emergency brake for your worries. Based on research published in Frontiers in Psychology, 2021 , applying cold facial immersion and breath holding would alleviate the above symptoms and soothe the physiological activation of the subjects. How to use it in practice Here is what you can do at home: Fill a bowl with cold water Add ice if you wish. The purpose is to cool your face as fast as possible. Hold your breath and submerge your face in it At first, it might feel like it is impossible to breathe, but start with it gently. Especially covering your forehead, eyes, and nose. Try to hold your breath for about 15-30 seconds. Lift your face and breathe Come up, breathe normally, and repeat if needed. Even one round can calm your heart rate and mind.