Polio Programme Has ‘Crucial Window’ Of Six Months For Recovery: TAG

3 mins read

ISLAMABAD: Identifying southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) as the epicentre of poliovirus transmission, with 73 cases recorded nationwide in the past year, the Technical Advisory Group (TAG) on Polio Eradication has urged Pakistan’s polio eradication program to capitalise on the first six months of 2025 as a “crucial window” to meet recommended Supplementary Immunisation Activity (SIA) quality benchmarks and key epidemiological milestones, writes M. Waqar Bhatti.

The recommendations, made at the 17th TAG meeting held in Islamabad from January 21-23, stressed the need for urgent action to put the program back on track and sustain progress in high-risk areas.

Pakistan reported a total of 73 wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) cases in 2024. Of these, 27 were from Balochistan, 22 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 22 from Sindh, and one each from Punjab and Islamabad. Additionally, over 625 environmental samples tested positive for poliovirus nationwide, underscoring the widespread circulation of the virus and the need for improved vaccination coverage and surveillance efforts across the country.

The TAG emphasised that achieving high-quality SIAs between January and June 2025 is critical to rebuilding momentum and addressing operational gaps. It also recommended intensified efforts in areas with persistent poliovirus circulation, particularly southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where both surveillance and vaccination efforts have fallen short.

While the TAG’s report provided robust guidance for polio eradication, its recommendations for strengthening the EPI were notably “mild and lacked specificity”. The report briefly acknowledged the importance of integrating routine immunisation with polio campaigns but failed to outline actionable steps to achieve this integration.

The report’s suggestions to “strengthen routine immunisation” and “address inequities” did not provide actionable solutions to longstanding issues such as inadequate cold chain systems, workforce shortages, and insufficient funding.

The advisory group also called for strengthened leadership, accountability, and a renewed focus on reaching missed children, especially in challenging areas.

The meeting’s provisional recommendations outlined province-specific challenges and strategies for improvement. While the TAG lauded progress in some areas, it expressed concerns over operational gaps, community resistance, and suboptimal campaign quality that have hindered eradication efforts.

The TAG report highlighted Southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) as the “epicentre” of wild poliovirus transmission in Pakistan, with the region posing the greatest risk to the eradication programme.

The group noted that despite efforts, the quality of vaccination campaigns in southern KP remains inconsistent, with key issues such as inadequate micro-planning and high refusal rates.

The TAG urged the provincial and federal governments to prioritise southern KP by deploying skilled staff, enhancing security arrangements for vaccinators, and engaging community leaders to address vaccine hesitancy. It also recommended the adoption of innovative strategies, including targeted community dialogues and digital monitoring systems, to improve coverage in inaccessible areas.

In Sindh, the TAG acknowledged improvements in Karachi’s high-risk union councils but raised concerns about northern Sindh, where operational challenges persist. Issues such as staff turnover, weak coordination, and inadequate community engagement continue to impede progress. The group recommended intensifying efforts to recruit and train skilled vaccinators, particularly women, to ensure access to underserved communities.

Punjab, often considered a model for polio eradication efforts, was commended for maintaining relatively high vaccination coverage. However, the TAG noted emerging risks in urban slums and migrant communities, where children remain vulnerable. It called for targeted interventions to address these pockets of susceptibility and sustain the province’s gains.

In Balochistan, low population density and logistical difficulties have compounded challenges in reaching all children. The TAG highlighted the need for improved campaign planning and stronger community engagement to overcome operational barriers.

The TAG also reviewed the integration of the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) with polio eradication efforts, though its recommendations were criticised as mild and vague.

It suggested improving coordination between the two programmes and enhancing routine immunisation coverage to ensure broader protection against vaccine-preventable diseases.

However, experts attending the meeting pointed out that stronger directives and concrete measures were necessary to ensure meaningful integration. The TAG emphasised that failure to meet quality benchmarks and epidemiological milestones in the first half of 2025 could jeopardise Pakistan’s chances of interrupting poliovirus transmission. It called for robust monitoring, enhanced accountability mechanisms, and greater ownership at the provincial level to drive progress.

Phases of progress in polio eradication were also discussed, with the group cautioning that the upcoming SIAs would require unprecedented levels of operational excellence to meet global standards.

The TAG’s report is seen as a wake-up call for Pakistan’s polio eradication programme, urging all stakeholders to act decisively in the coming months to achieve the longstanding goal of a polio-free Pakistan.

Published in News Daily on 28-January-2025.

Previous Story

Bill Tabled In PA For Appointment Of Bureaucrats As Chairmen Of Sindh Education Boards

Next Story

IGP Decides To Hold Regular Meetings About Missing Children

Latest from Blog

LHC Upholds Child Maintenance Orders

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) has ruled that financial hardship cannot relieve a father of his legal, moral and religious obligation to provide maintenance for his minor child, declaring the responsibility a continuous duty protected under both Islamic and Pakistani law. In a detailed 15-page judgment, Justice Mohsin Akhtar…

Raised on Fear

One day Suhana, a Year 6 student, entered the classroom with tears in her eyes. Her teachers had noticed that she had become unusually quiet over the past few months and was continuously failing her assessments. Teachers often called her out, asking her to focus more on studies and improve…

Madressah Teacher Jailed for 15 Years in Two Sexual Assault Cases

KARACHI: A sessions court on May 20 sentenced a seminary teacher to 15 years in prison each in two cases after he was found guilty of sexually abusing two of his students in a local madressah in Landhi. Additional District and Sessions Judge Naseer Noor Khan, who is also the…

Child Nutrition Crisis

Pakistan’s child nutrition crisis has long been treated as a welfare issue when, in reality, it is a national emergency with generational consequences. To cater to this worsening crisis, Unicef has partnered with the University of Health Sciences to launch a capacity-building programme aimed at incorporating nutrition and child health…

Ghotki Police Register Gang Rape FIR

SUKKUR: The Ghotki police have registered a gang rape case against some influential figures of Adilpur and their several associates on May 19 after much uproar on social media over the “horrific and inhuman treatment” allegedly meted out to the victim. The 15-year-old seemingly devastated girl had narrated her ordeal…
Go toTop