Over 7m Children To Be Vaccinated In KP During Upcoming Polio Campaign

1 min read

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has set a target of vaccinating approximately 7.3 million children under the age of five during a five-day anti-polio campaign, which begins on 26th May.

Chief secretary Shahab Ali Shah inaugurated the campaign during a ceremony held at the Services Hospital here, according to a press release.

Additional secretary health and Emergency Operations Centre coordinator Shafiullah Khan, representatives from Unicef and World Health Organisation, and other officials were in attendance.

Speaking to the media on the occasion, Mr Ali emphasised that polio remained a dangerous disease that could cause lifelong disability in children, placing immense emotional and financial strain on families.

He stressed that the presence of poliovirus in any area continued to pose a threat to all children, making it vital that every child received the vaccine during the campaign.

According to Emergency Operations Centre a total of 35,465 trained polio workers have been deployed, besides 32,155 mobile, 1,918 fixed, 1,225 transit, and 167 roaming teams.

Furthermore, 8,351 area in-charges have been appointed to ensure effective monitoring of the campaign.

Security arrangements have also been made to facilitate polio teams during the campaign.

In Bajaur, deputy commissioner Shahid Ali Khan on Friday emphasised the need for close liaison among health officials, elders, religious leaders and other stakeholders to

ensure the success of the anti-polio campaign.

He made these remarks during a ‘readiness meeting’ for the upcoming polio campaign, according to an official statement.

The meeting was informed that 270,000 children under the age of five would receive polio drops during the campaign, for which over 1,800 polio workers had been deployed.

M Ali directed the health officials to ensure that all participating doctors and paramedical staff were available throughout the campaign.

The meeting asked the district health officer to ensure that all polio teams had all basic facilities needed to perform their duties effectively.

In Dera Ismail Khan, deputy commissioner Abdul Nasir Khan chaired a high-level meeting to finalise preparations for the upcoming

National Immunisation Days campaign, scheduled to run from May 26 to June 1.

The meeting focused on ensuring the smooth and effective implementation of the polio vaccination drive across the district.

Key operational plans were reviewed and finalised during the session.

The deputy commissioner directed all the departments to ensure strict adherence to quality standards during the campaign, emphasising the importance of reaching every eligible child.

Published in Dawn, May 24th, 2025

Previous Story

CCD Reunites 44 Missing Kids With Their Families

Next Story

Notable Decline In Poliovirus Detection

Latest from Blog

Children at risk

Pakistan has once again found itself in the middle of a rapidly expanding public health challenge: childhood obesity. The latest findings from the World Obesity Atlas 2026 should ideally serve as a wakeup call for our health authorities. Since 2010, the prevalence of obesity among Pakistani children and adolescents has…

Education for Prosperity

Pakistan possesses a demographic profile that could either become its greatest asset or its most destabilising liability. Unfortunately, we are headed in the wrong direction. To understand the scale of the challenge, it is important to recognise the extent of Pakistan’s educational underinvestment. Unesco has advised a minimum of 4-6…

Missing Boy Found Dead in Graveyard

BAHAWALPUR: The Musafir Khana police have recovered the body of a 12-year-old boy from a graveyard in Goth Mehro, around 30 kilometers from the city. The authorities suspect the victim was murdered following a sexual assault. The victim, identified as Muhammad Javed, son of Abdul Hamid, went missing on the…

Starved Childhoods

EVERY day, in homes across Pakistan, millions of children are quietly being left behind. Not by flood or famine, earthquake or epidemic, but by the slow, invisible erosion of chronic undernutrition. The crisis unfolding concerns the 40 percent of Pakistani children under five who are stunted, the nearly 10m children…
Go toTop