Categories
India News

Paramedics boycott polio, Covid vax campaign in KP

Protesters chanted anti-government slogans and demanded security and compensation for the dead and injured health workers, who have been targeted by assailants…reports Asian Lite News

After a polio health worker and at least two security officials were shot dead by unknown assailants during a polio vaccination drive, more than 2,000 health workers, who are assigned to administer polio and Coronavirus vaccines in North Waziristan district of Khyber Pukhtunkhwa (KP), have announced a boycott of the campaign due to lack of security provided to them by the government.

Hundreds of paramedics, health workers and polio vaccination campaign members staged a protest outside the Miranshah Press Club, demanding security to their health workers and vaccinators, who go out in a door-to-door campaign vaccination drives in security risk areas like the North Waziristan district.

Protesters chanted anti-government slogans and demanded security and compensation for the dead and injured health workers, who have been targeted by assailants.

“We work in areas, which have been highly sensitive and dangerous for polio and coronavirus health workers. Our health workers have been attacked, targeted, killed and assaulted many times. The government has failed to provide us ample security and has also failed to compensate those who have laid their lives in the line of duty in the past,” said a protester.

Protesting health workers carried placards with slogans such as “Protest the Polio Worker”, “Announce Compensation Package for the martyrs and the injured”, as they raised slogans in favour of their demands, vowing to boycott the polio and coronavirus vaccination campaign until their demands are met by the government.

“Our responsibility is to administer polio vaccine and the responsibility of the government is to maintain law and order. Police and district administration have failed to arrest the attackers and have also failed to protect the polio workers,” said Malik Jalaluddin, President, All Paramedics Association.

Jalaluddin said the demands of protection of workers and compensation for the injured and martyred is a legitimate demand, which has been pending with the government for some time. He said he will not risk thousands of lives of his workers and will not leave them to the mercy of those, who target and kill them.

“If the government cannot protect the polio workers, then we will not take part in the vaccination campaigns,” said Malik Jalaluddin.

“Our boycott will continue until the government takes concrete steps for improvement in the law and order,” he added.

Pakistan is the only country after Afghanistan, with deposits of polio virus. In the past, militant groups have not only targeted and killed dozens of polio workers but have also threatened locals, especially in the tribal areas of Pakistan, of dire consequences of they let their children get polio vaccinations.

At the moment, there are at least 900 paramedics and at least 1,700 class four employees, assigned to administer the vaccination drives in the North Waziristan district. However, with targeted attacks on health workers continuing unabated, polio workers have refused to be part of the vaccination drive.

ALSO READ-WHO to begin Covid vax drive in Afghanistan from June

Categories
-Top News UK News

Polio found in Britain for the first time in 40 years

Britain stopped using oral poliovirus vaccines in 2004, and British health authorities said it was likely that the virus found in the sewage samples had been imported by someone who was recently vaccinated with it abroad…reports Asian Lite News

A type of poliovirus derived from vaccines has been detected in London sewage samples, the World Health Organization and British health officials said Wednesday, adding that more analysis was underway.

No human cases of polio have been found in Britain, where the crippling disease was fully eradicated two decades ago.

The WHO said in a statement that “type 2 vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV2)” had been found in environmental samples in the British capital.

“It is important to note that the virus has been isolated from environmental samples only,” it said, stressing that “no associated cases of paralysis have been detected.”

But it warned, “any form of poliovirus anywhere is a threat to children everywhere.”

A massive global effort has in recent decades come close to wiping out polio, a crippling and potentially fatal viral disease that mainly affects children under the age of five.

Cases have decreased by 99 percent since 1988, when polio was endemic in 125 countries and 350,000 cases were recorded worldwide.

The wild version of the virus now exists only in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but a type of vaccine that contains small amounts of weakened but live polio still causes occasional outbreaks elsewhere.

‘Check vaccination histories’

Oral polio vaccine (OPV) replicates in the gut and can be passed to others through faecal-contaminated water — meaning it won’t hurt the child who has been vaccinated, but could infect their neighbours in places where hygiene and immunisation levels are low.

While weaker than wild poliovirus, this variant can cause serious illness and paralysis in people not vaccinated against the disease.

Globally, there were 959 confirmed cases of VDPV2 in 2020, according to the WHO.

Polio eradication expert Kathlene O’Reilly warned Wednesday that the discovery in the London sewage samples suggests “there may be localised spread of poliovirus, most likely within individuals that are not up to date with polio immunisations”.

“The most effective way to prevent further spread is to check vaccination histories, especially of young children, to check that polio vaccination is included,” she said.

Polio immunisation coverage in London stands at nearly 87 percent, the WHO said.

The UN’s health agency has called for OPV to be phased out worldwide and replaced with inactivated polio vaccine (IPV).

Britain stopped using OPV in 2004, and British health authorities said it was likely that the virus found in the sewage samples had been imported by someone who was recently vaccinated with it abroad.

‘We are not isolated’

David Elliman, a consultant paediatrician at Great Ormond Street Hospital said parents sometimes ask why vaccines continue to be given against diseases that have been eliminated in the UK, like polio.

“The answer is that, although we are an island, we are not isolated from the rest of the world, which means diseases could be brought in from abroad,” he said.

“The finding of vaccine-derived polio virus in sewage proves the point.”

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said the virus isolates had been found in “multiple sewage samples collected from the London Beckton Sewage Treatment Works between February and June 2022.”

The plant covers a large swathe of north and east London that is home to around four million people.

A couple of polio virus isolates are detected each year on average in UK sewage samples, but they tend to be unrelated, health authorities said, warning that in this case the isolates were “genetically related”.

“This has prompted the need to investigate the extent of transmission of this virus in northeast London,” UKHSA said.

ALSO READ-Pakistan sees jump in polio cases

Categories
Arab News Health News

Israel detects first polio case since 1989

The Israeli Ministry of Health has said it has detected polio infection in a 4-year-old child in Jerusalem…reports Asian Lite News

This is the first case of polio detected in Israel since 1989, Xinhua news agency reported, citing the Israeli media.

The child was not vaccinated as part of the routine vaccinations that children receive in Israel, the ministry said in a statement.

The source of the disease in this case is a strain of polio virus that has changed and can cause disease in those who are not vaccinated, the statement said.

Following the infection, the ministry called for adherence to routine vaccinations at the recommended times and the completion of vaccinations for those who have not yet done so.

ALSO READ: Israel will continue to mediate between Russia and Ukraine

The ministry’s regional health administration in Jerusalem has begun an epidemiological investigation and will contact people who were close to the child for specific guidance.

Further recommendations will be decided upon the findings, the ministry noted.

The virus has been recently found in sewage samples in Jerusalem, but so far there has been no clinical cases, it added.