Reshma with her daughters Muskan and Bindiya. — Photo by author HELP, a non-governmental organisation Dr Akram is associated with, has been asked to facilitate the government by mobilising and persuading parents to take their children to fixed EPI centres or outreach sites set up during the campaign.
“The government has realised it cannot reach so many kids on its own and needs the help of civil society organisations,” said Dr Akram. However, she doubts if it will be able to meet its target. “The awareness of the disease — typhoid, the advantages of getting the kids vaccinated, busting the myths around vaccination — should have started four weeks before the campaign. I have not seen anything on TV or heard about it on the radio,” she said.
But why this sudden need to vaccinate all these children against typhoid?
It all started some three years back when healthcare practitioners reported getting people diagnosed with typhoid in Hyderabad and Karachi but who were infected with strains of the bacteria resistant to drugs used to treat the disease.
The foremost reason why typhoid became untreatable was the “injudicious use of antibiotics prescribed by doctors”, said Dr Akram Sultan, project director, EPI-Sindh. But he also blamed the people’s “irrational use” and resorting to “self-medication” and pressuring the doctor for “immediate relief”.
It became a global concern when last year, epidemiologists at the US-based Centres for Disease Control and Prevention traced a strain of extensively drug-resistant (XDR) typhoid bacteria to Pakistan and said it would survive and spread easily.
Dilapidated infrastructure, a broken down sanitation system, leaking sewerage lines, more than half the city residents living in katchi abadis, poor hygiene practices and a dismal healthcare system are perfect breeding ground for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi bacteria, said Dr Mumtaz Lakhani, secretary general of the Pakistan Paediatric Association.
“Obviously these need to be addressed if we are to rid ourselves of this disease, but we cannot wait for that to happen and the next best solution is to prevent the children from getting this disease,” said Dr Lakhani. She said the WHO-approved vaccine had minimal or no side effects and was effective for about 10 years.
The AKU researchers have investigated the trends from as far back as 1990. “There was a decline of typhoid in the 1990s but this has remained stagnant since 2005,” said Dr Jai Das, one of the researchers, speaking to Dawn. The AKU also led a vaccination campaign in schools in select towns of Karachi in 2010-11 and vaccinated around 120,000 children.
They published their findings (based on laboratory findings from its own labs and two other institutions) — Trends, Associations, and Antimicrobial Resistance of Salmonella Typhi and Paratyphi in Pakistan, in 2018 — and found a strong association of water and sanitation indicators to literacy levels with typhoid. While there is no reliable data for food safety in Pakistan, the study stressed improving food safety protocols and implementation of regulations.
And as indicated by Dr Sultan, the study also attributed the resistance to antibiotics to its careless use in Pakistan, both as prescribed by general practitioners and its easy availability.
But when in 2016 they found this new phenomenon, XDR, the “first in the world, it drew a huge response and attention”, said Dr Das. It was the AKU that had found out about the XDR typhoid bacteria in the sewerage in Hyderabad in 2016.
As a pilot in the year 2018-19, led by Dr Farah Qamar, they vaccinated more than 200,000 children in Hyderabad in areas from where these cases were erupting. The latest Global Burden of Disease analysis estimates that, in 2017, Pakistan had 515,914 typhoid cases, 63 percent of which were among children under 15 years of age.
"It is a good step that the government is taking in rolling out this vaccine," said Dr Das, but added: "The strain is also found in adult population" who will not benefit from this vaccination that is targeted towards children only. For a long term sustainable solution, he said we have to look beyond vaccination.
The same was noted by Dr Bhutta. "With a large proportion of cases also among adults, and the possibility of carriers it is likely that large-scale immunization campaigns would need to include adults as well as focus on additional preventive measures. It should be recognized that Pakistan needed to focus on improving water quality, hygiene and sanitary conditions and also strictly implement food safety regulations”.
Published in Dawn, November 14th, 2019