How to Eradicate Polio?

Author: Rana Jawad Asghar
2 mins read

Just days ago, another police officer has been martyred while guarding a health team administering polio drops to kids in Pakistan. Since 2012 many hundreds of Pakistani law enforcers and health staff engaged in polio eradication have sacrificed their lives. In a recent article in The Lancet, Prof Dr Zulifqar Bhutta has mentioned that Pakistan has spent nearly $10 billion on polio eradication since 2011, with most of this amount coming directly from international donors. Still last year there was a setback for polio eradication as 74 new cases were found in the country in 2024. Every year different high-level international expert committees meet to evaluate the situation of polio eradication and issue similar recommendations year after year. However, international donors can’t absolve themselves of the responsibility, as they are in the driving seat of strategy-making and the implementation of polio eradication in Pakistan. The Government of Pakistan also shares the responsibility for these failures as it relegates its own responsibility to others. But enough of the blame game. Now, what to do to eradicate this deadly disease?

When I was a public health student in the mid-nineties at the University of Washington, many of our senior professors were veterans of smallpox eradication campaigns. Smallpox is the only deadly disease humans have been able to successfully eradicate. Our old professors told us two important things for immunisation campaigns.

First, national immunisation days (NIDs), which commonly happen in Pakistan, actually destroy the country’s routine immunisation (RI) programmes. They do this in multiple ways. As resources are diverted from routine immunisations, and salary and perks in disease eradication programmes are much better, there is a major brain drain. Another issue is that NIDs do not end in just one day but last much longer – from one week to two weeks. RI staff is also temporarily engaged in these campaigns, severely affecting routine immunisation work.

Second, in overall public health activities, it’s not advisable to engage law enforcement agencies, especially when you are reaching out to marginalised sections of society. Historically, these sections of populations have had very little trust in government agencies, and their presence could make them withdraw from those initiatives. This is a global phenomenon and not a local issue.

However, we have some special circumstances. Health workers safety was compromised with the news of a fake vaccine campaign even though it had nothing to do with polio work. Secondly, the task of polio eradication was taken away from health departments and given under the leadership of administrative officials. More than 10 years ago, it was thought that we were at the very tail of polio eradication, and we needed the full resources and power of the government to push for the final mile. So, the leadership of the polio programme in Pakistan was taken away from health professionals and handed over to the bureaucracy. In the beginning, it showed results because the way a District Coordinating Officer or a Commissioner could muster up all the district resources, a poor District Health Officer couldn’t. However, this was meant for short term because it had its own pitfalls that instead of public health strategies, the polio programme was relying on the brute force of district administration. More than a decade later, we are pretty much worse, except for some minor wins.

We need to take some major steps if we are serious about polio eradication. The leadership of the programme should return to public health professionals of Pakistan. Strategy should be built from the ground up and needs to have flexibility. A significant gap in meaningful community engagement needs to be filled urgently. Talks about polio and routine immunisation synergy are just talks for years with zero improvement. News about a government plan for a new hierarchical setup of polio and routine immunisation synergy, headed by a member of civil bureaucracy, will complicate things further. The real polio and routine synergy will happen only when polio becomes part of the package of routine immunisation. We must stop living in illusions.

Article (Opinion) published in the Express Tribune on 27th February 2025

Previous Story

Public Schools Witness Low Enrolments

Next Story

Three Sisters Crushed To Death In Gilgit

Latest from Blog

Protecting Children from Grooming and Abuse

This video contains a discussion of abuse, including predatory and abusive behavior towards children. TEDx events are independently organized by volunteers.  Abuse often begins not with obvious harm, but with trust, praise, and attention that slowly become grooming. In this powerful talk, Amy Saltzman, M.D., a former competitive gymnast, physician,…

Are Teens in Pakistan Safe on Discord and Reddit?

Some of the riskiest teen online spaces aren’t the ones parents check. Discord and Reddit work very differently from apps like Instagram or TikTok. Discord lets users join servers and private groups with little identity verification, while anonymity is a default on Reddit, making both harder for parents to track.…

Man Booked For Rape, Blackmail Of Minor Girl In Bahawalpur

BAHAWALPUR: Dhanote police in Lodhran district registered a case against a man for raping a minor girl and blackmailing her with objectionable videos. According to police, the FIR against the suspect was registered on the complaint of the victim’s mother. According to the complainant, her victim’s daughter had gone to…

Caged in Care

The May 2026 NCHR investigative report, “Caged in Care,” exposes systemic human rights abuses and medical malpractice within private, unregulated rehabilitation centers across Pakistan, which frequently operate as profit-driven custodial spaces rather than genuine therapeutic facilities. The investigation reveals that these centers are heavily weaponized as instruments of patriarchal control…

Boy Killed In Wana Mosque In Lower South Waziristan

SOUTH WAZIRISTAN: A nine-year-old boy was killed inside a mosque in the Zeri Noor area of Wana tehsil in Lower South Waziristan district, police said on 4 July. They said the deceased, identified as Waqas, belonged to the Wazir Mughalkhel tribe. Police officials said the child was allegedly murdered inside…
Go toTop