| Literature DB >> 30654797 |
Shahella Idrees Shakeel1, Matthew Brown2, Shakeel Sethi3, Tim K Mackey4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: On April 28, 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared polio a "Public Health Emergency of International Concern" (PHIC) under the authority of the International Health Regulations. Although polio has been eradicated from nearly every nation on earth, Pakistan is one of three countries where wild polio and vaccine-derived polio strains remain, thwarting global eradication efforts. AIMS: Polio eradication progress is complicated by security and conflict issues at the border area between Pakistan and Afghanistan. In addition to security issues, other critical challenges, such as maintaining cold supply chain for vaccines, active and sentinel surveillance, false beliefs about vaccines, distrust of healthcare workers, and accessibility to conflict areas due to terrorist activities, all play a role in the continued persistence of Polio. In response to these challenges, we assess the local and international policy environment and its impact on polio eradication in Pakistan.Entities:
Keywords: Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP); Circulatory vaccine derived polio virus (cVDPV); Global health diplomacy (GHD); Health diplomacy; Polio eradication; Vaccine diplomacy; Wild polio virus (WPV)
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30654797 PMCID: PMC6337835 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6393-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Polio eradication summary timeline (uploaded separately)
Summary of GHD Recommendations for Polio in Pakistan
| Recommendation | Challenge(s) | Potential Solutions |
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| FATA and other affected border areas are facing a serious water scarcity problem as the region lacks dams for water storage resulting in poor sanitary conditions. The combination of lack of literacy, false cultural beliefs and reduced water supply in border areas have resulted in reduced hand washing, even though Islam emphasizes the practice of frequent handwashing in the Quran to reduce disease risk. Tainted water and poor sanitary conditions transmit fecal–oral route infections like polio, hepatitis-A, and typhoid, and must be addressed in any comprehensive vaccine diplomacy efforts. | Access to clean drinking water must be prioritized as a fundamental human right and as a function of ensuring global health security and ending polio. Partner organizations such as Rotary International, UNICEF, RESULTS (an organization whose goal is to end poverty in the world), the UN Foundation, the Global Poverty Project, the World Bank and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation can help provide vulnerable populations with water treatment plants that ensure safe water supply. These efforts should integrate with Polio eradication efforts and should be specifically targeted for polio at-risk areas including border and rural communities. |
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| Environmental surveillance has detected polio virus in all provinces in Pakistan, although positive environmental samples decreased from 38% in 2014 to 16% in 2017.b Laboratory tests on sewage indicate the presence of under-immunized or unimmunized children who can transmit the virus and contribute to its continuing spread.c These children might have been immunized with expired and thus ineffective polio vaccines if the cold chain was not maintained during transport, while administering the vaccine, or if the children were missed cases. | To better quantify if these polio virus environmental trends are perpetuating, continued environmental surveillance of wastewater and sewage must be a priority. Positive environmental samples can serve as a proxy indicator for missed or unimmunized children that are not captured by other surveillance methods. |
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| Mobilization of the community and religious leaders is important in health promotion efforts and achieving higher vaccine coverage. Religious leaders and the Imam Masjid (the worship leader of a mosque) can play a vital role in motivating people and improving community participation in polio eradication programs. The people of FATA and other affected border areas live in communities with strong religious beliefs and are oftentimes more conservative than Pakistani populations that live in other provinces. Additionally, community health workers need to be appropriately trained and incentivized. | |
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| Movement of people between different regions internal to a country as a result of armed conflict, generalized violence or violation of human rights is termed “internal displacement of people.” Internally displaced people (IDP) are at particular risk for higher rates of unimmunized children, including in populations from south and north Waziristan, where conflict and displacement has created an immunity gap.g The percentage of children missed due to polio teams not showing up is highest in FATA and Baluchistan.g Pockets of unimmunized children are chronically missed because of internal migration and displacement in these conflicted areas.g Internal displacement also has the potential to threaten broader disease transmission to larger cities like Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad, when unimmunized IDPs are resettled and introduced into new communities. | Recognition of the human and health rights of IDPs and the unique health and security risks they face is important. This begins with clarification of their legal status and their right to access health services. IDPs should be prioritized in Polio eradication and vaccination interventions as an at-risk group. These groups should also be assessed for their risk of polio transmission in the context of forced migration or political displacement. |
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| Public service and mass media campaigns broadcast over radio can improve the regional population’s knowledge about benefits of polio vaccination. Announcements from religious leaders on both radio and digital channels such as YouTube can act as a powerful health promotion and vaccine awareness tool if utilized properly. | People in border areas communicate more frequently through mobile phones compared to traditional mass media forms such as television broadcast. In response, mobile applications using m-health (mobile Health) interventions have been deployed to help polio eradication teams increase their vaccination coverage in affected areas.h Mobile phones are thus changing the way people access data and allowing public health interventions to expand to communities that may be remote or hard to engage with. In Pakistan in 2010, for example, mobile SMS-based service enabled parents to report missed cases of polio vaccine coverage.h |
Sources
a http://www.emro.who.int/pak/pakistan-infocus/introduces-ipv-in-routine-immunization.html
b https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5059991/
c http://polioeradication.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Inter-country-coordination-meeting-WPVCommonReservoirs_September2016.pdf
d https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-26734465
e https://www.dawn.com/news/1167750
f http://polioeradication.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/2.2_12IMB.pdf
g https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4750438/