Poor Sanitation Fuels Surge in Gastro, Viral Infections Across Multan

2 mins read

MULTAN: Poor sanitation and lack of cleanliness are contributing to the rapid spread of viral, bacterial and parasitic infections in Multan, health practitioners warned.

The unhygienic environment is resulting in fever, fatigue, cough, aches, and other illness-related symptoms. Experts explained that viruses – microscopic agents that invade a host’s cells and force them to replicate – spread through various means, including respiratory droplets, contaminated surfaces, and bodily fluids.

The people have urged Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz to expedite the ‘Suthra Punjab’ campaign in Multan to improve deteriorating sanitation conditions. Gastroenteritis remains the most widespread disease affecting both urban and rural areas of Multan, largely due to poor cleanliness.

Health practitioners at Nishtar Hospital reported that gastro infections, caused by viral, bacterial, or parasitic agents, typically spread through contaminated food, unsafe drinking water, or direct person-to-person contact. Other causes may include chemicals, certain medicines, and transmission in crowded living or working conditions such as daycares and nursing homes.

According to the hospital’s patient registration records, 91 gastro patients were admitted between November 20 and 26 – a figure described as alarming by medical staff. Of these cases, 16 were children and 75 adults.

On average, 15 gastro patients are being admitted daily, underscoring the severity of the situation. Doctors emphasized that poor sanitation is a major driver of gastroenteritis, which causes diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps, and is commonly spread through the fecal-oral route due to inadequate hygiene. The health experts explained that gastro spreads rapidly when pathogens from infected human or animal stools contaminate the environment and enter a new host.

Poor access to clean drinking water and inadequate wastewater disposal allow fecal matter to pollute wells, rivers, and other water sources – a major cause of diarrheal diseases such as cholera. Contaminated food is another key source of infection.

Unhygienic food preparation practices, improper storage, and insufficient handwashing by food handlers greatly increase risks. Undercooked meat and seafood can harbor bacteria such as Salmonella and Campylobacter. In crowded environments such as daycares and parks, surfaces like toys and diapers often become contaminated, allowing infections to spread quickly. Open defecation near residential areas and the unsafe disposal of children’s stools further intensify transmission risks. Flies landing on fecal matter can carry pathogens to food and household surfaces, creating multiple pathways for infection.

A senior professor of medicine noted that person-to-person contact remains one of the most common transmission routes. Germs spread easily when infected individuals do not wash their hands properly after using the toilet or cleaning up vomit or diarrhea and then touch other people or shared surfaces.

Contaminated food and water – including undercooked meat, unpasteurized dairy, and produce washed in unsafe water – continue to be major sources of infection. Poor food handling practices, such as using the same cutting board for raw meat and ready-to-eat foods, also contribute to cross-contamination. Inadequate sanitation systems and unsafe drinking water create an environment in which gastroenteritis spreads rapidly.

The civil society activists, including Punjab Labour Alliance Chairman Ghazi Ahmed Hassan Khokhar, have appealed to the Punjab chief minister for urgent intervention to improve cleanliness conditions. They stressed the need to accelerate the ‘Suthra Punjab’ campaign in Multan so residents can breathe in a cleaner and safer environment.

Published in The NEWS on November 29, 2025. 

Previous Story

Back-to-Back Blasts Target Tank Schools

Next Story

Pneumonia, ARDS Start Hitting Population in Twin Cities

Latest from Blog

School Meal Programme Launched in Bhakkar

LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif inaugurated a Danish School in Mankera, Bhakkar, and launched the School Meal Programme at Government Primary School Kisanwala, terming education and nutrition key pillars for a brighter future of children. During a visit, the chief minister announced the upgradation of three schools in…

AI Tool Launched to Stop Online Child Sexual Exploitation

ISLAMABAD: As online spaces grow increasingly unsafe for children, Pakistan is facing an unprecedented surge in digital evidence linked to child sexual exploitation and abuse, with nearly one million referrals received each year; therefore, swift identification of the most urgent cases has become a critical national priority. In response, the…

Over 600 Child Abuse Videos Recovered as Major Exploitation Network Busted

RAWALPINDI: Authorities have exposed a major network involved in producing, buying and selling obscene videos of children, arresting a key operative and recovering more than 600 videos. The suspect, identified as Taimur Mahmood, a resident of Murree, was arrested from Rawalpindi by the National Cyber Crimes Investigation Agency (NCCIA). According…

Rights Groups Oppose Children’s Digital Exclusion

LAHORE: Several digital and child rights groups have cautioned that blanket bans or age-based prohibitions on children’s access to social media are a flawed and regressive response to risks including online abuse, exploitation, harassment and exposure to harmful content. Such measures shift responsibility away from the government and technology companies…

Screens Over Mothers: Mobile Use Stunting kids’ Minds

KARACHI: Experts have raised concerns that negligence in child rearing is seriously affecting the mental development and growth of children, with many showing signs of psychological issues from an early age. Feeding infants with bottles instead of breastfeeding is contributing to infections, while excessive exposure to mobile phones and cartoons…
Go toTop