It pays to get vaccinated, in more ways than one

Parents in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province are to get 1,000 rupees for each child who completes vaccinations

March 12, 2014 07:09 pm | Updated May 19, 2016 08:10 am IST - PESHAWAR

Pakistani policemen stand guard as a health worker gives a child a polio vaccine in Karachi, Pakistan.

Pakistani policemen stand guard as a health worker gives a child a polio vaccine in Karachi, Pakistan.

Parents in one of Pakistan’s most troubled provinces are to be paid to vaccinate their children against polio, the crippling disease the world is tantalisingly close to eradicating.

It is hoped some two million children from some of the most disadvantaged areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), the north-western province wracked by Taliban violence, will benefit from the scheme.

Parents will be entitled to claim 1,000 rupees for each child who completes a 15-month programme of vaccinations that will protect them against a number of diseases including measles, hepatitis and polio.

It is the first time the country has resorted to monetary incentives, which are rarely used around the world.

Public health officials battling childhood diseases face immense challenges in KP, where militant attacks are a daily routine, poverty is entrenched and many people are deeply suspicious of programmes enthusiastically backed by western powers.

“It has to be a good amount of money to be attractive, even in the very poorest districts of the province,” said Janbaz Afridi, deputy director of the province’s expanded programme on immunisation.

“If it is a success we will extend it to every child in the province.” KP’s government, backed by U.N. agencies, is currently on a war footing against polio in particular because Peshawar, the province’s teeming capital, has become a global health problem.

The historic frontier city is one of the last remaining redoubts of polio, the virus that cripples and kills children and which has been eradicated in every country except Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria.

Cases from around the world, including China and Syria, have been genetically matched to the Peshawar strain.

Last month the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the city the “largest reservoir of endemic poliovirus in the world”, a problem caused in part by the city’s open sewage channels and broken water pipes. Polio is spread through contact with human faeces.

Within the neighbouring tribal areas, Peshawar acts as a central exchange and an “amplifier” for a disease carried in and out of the city by the tens of thousands of people who pass through every day, including a huge population of refugees who fled Afghanistan in the 1980s.

The WHO says more than 90 per cent of cases around the country and in neighbouring Afghanistan are genetically linked to the city.

Of the world’s three polio-endemic countries, Pakistan is the only one where the situation is getting worse and cases are increasing.

The latest push in Peshawar is an attempt to give polio vaccine drops to almost every child under the age of five every weekend for three months.

It requires 8,000 health workers to hit the streets with the aim of vaccinating nearly 800,000 children in a single day.

Four thousand police officers will escort them to protect them against the gunmen who have killed scores of polio vaccinators around the country in recent years.

It’s a major problem for a campaign officials say needs to reach 97 per cent of children to stand a chance of eradicating the disease in the city.

Polio teams carry booklets of “fatwas”, or religious decrees, by famous scholars who argue there is nothing wrong with the drops.

The government has also called on high-profile clerics to support the programme.

Some vaccinators say that while fewer parents are refusing the drops for their children, many hide them indoors on vaccination days. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2014

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