HEALTH: THE BATTLE AGAINST POLIO IS STILL ON
Akhter Mohammad had been married for 12 years and had only two daughters, when in 2015 he was blessed with twin sons. The children’s grandmother wanted to save her grandsons from the ‘evil eye’ and kept them indoors mostly. So when health workers showed up at their door to administer polio drops to the children, they were disallowed to do so. The officials term the parents’ non-cooperation as ‘silent refusal’; they were not included as ‘refusals’ to their official record. The district health officials claim that the twins did not receive a single dose of polio vaccine.
Unfortunately, saving the children from ‘evil eye’ resulted in Habib contracting polio and being paralysed for life. At the age of two, Habibur Rehman was diagnosed with polio in November 2017. Cradling the child in her lap now, his grandmother says, “We are poor and have nothing for the treatment of my ailing grandson.”
Thirty-five-year-old Akhter Mohammad, the only bread-earner of the hand-to-mouth family, lived in a mud house surrounded by similar huts in Sohrab Goth — a slum in the east of Zhob district in Balochistan — for about a year. The majority of those residing in the katchi abadi had migrated from Loralai district as their relatives lived there.
Will Pakistan’s anti-polio drive this year clear areas like Zhob district where a case of polio has been detected?
Zhob district was declared poliovirus free four years ago, but in November 2017 the situation became challenging for health officials, when the National Institute of Health (NIH) report confirmed that Habib-ur-Rehman had contracted the disease. His stool samples were sent to the central lab for diagnostic tests, where the virus was detected.
Zhob has not only historical but geographical importance as well in Balochistan. The area falls on the international route of Afghan nomads, locally known as Kochis who pass here twice every year. The Kochis, are a high risk mobile population and are considered to be the biggest carriers of poliovirus.
Health officials quoting the NIH report, say that the virus was brought from Landhi, Karachi to Loralai and then to the slum area in Zhob. Though Habib’s family has been residing in Zhob, their relatives from Loralai brought the virus from Karachi to Loralai and then to Zhob.