KARACHI: Pakistan’s healthcare and disaster response systems are failing to meet the needs of children and older people who are most at risk of death and disease amid extreme weather events related to climate change, Amnesty International said in a new report.
Invisible deaths of older people and children during climate disasters in Pakistan documents how increasingly frequent floods and heatwaves are overwhelming Pakistan’s underfunded healthcare system, leading to preventable deaths among young children and older adults in particular.
Pakistan, which contributes about 1 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions annually, is the world’s fifth-most vulnerable country to climate disasters.
In collaboration with Indus Hospital & Health Network (IHHN), a charity hospital that provides free healthcare in Pakistan, Amnesty International investigated how spikes in deaths often followed extreme weather events.
“Rising temperatures drive ever more intense and unpredictable weather. Children and older people in Pakistan are suffering on the front line of the climate crisis, exposed to extreme heat or floods that lead to disproportionate levels of death and disease,” said Laura Mills, researcher with Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Programme.
“Pakistan’s healthcare system is woefully underfunded and overstretched, even in non-emergency times. The climate emergency creates an extra strain that is unbearable and the system is failing to deliver adequate care to those in need.” Floods often foster the spread of water- and mosquito-borne diseases and respiratory illnesses, which pose a major threat to older people and young children.
Similarly, extreme heat is most dangerous for older adults, particularly those with pre-existing health conditions, as well as infants. Pakistan collects virtually no mortality data on these impacts, limiting its ability to respond adequately and save lives. IHHN conducted a quantitative study, analysing deaths across three of its facilities in 2022: Badin (in Sindh province, most affected by floods), and Muzaffargarh and Bhong (in Punjab province, most affected by heatwaves).
IHHN compared the relationship between mortality rates and climate indicators, including precipitation and temperature. To build on IHHN’s quantitative investigation, Amnesty International conducted qualitative interviews to further understand the situation.
Amnesty International visited Sindh and Punjab provinces four times between April 2024 and January 2025 and conducted remote interviews in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. In total, the organisation interviewed 210 people, including 90 relatives of people whose deaths could credibly be explained by heatwaves or flooding.
Published in News Daily on 07-May-2025.