Islamabad, October 21, 2024 — The Pakistan Polio Eradication Programme organized a media engagement session at the National Emergency Operations Centre for Polio Eradication (NEOC) in Islamabad to strengthen collaboration and foster greater media engagement in the ongoing fight against polio.
The event brought together health reporters from various print, electronic, and online media outlets, aiming to provide them with accurate data, present the programme's current strategy to fight poliovirus, and address media questions ahead of the nationwide polio vaccination campaign set to begin on October 28, 2024.
The Prime Minister’s Focal Person for Polio Eradication Ms. Ayesha Raza Farooq led the session and provided journalists with critical updates on the current status of the polio programme efforts in the country. NEOC Coordinator Mr Anwarul Haq presented the key challenges facing the eradication efforts, including persistent vaccine hesitancy, population movement, and security concerns in high-risk areas that affect consistent access to children with the vaccine.
Ms. Ayesha Raza emphasized the government’s strong commitment to polio eradication from the highest office of PM to the provincial and district levels and said that polio eradication is being taken forward as national priority agenda with a consensus roadmap being implemented to interrupt virus transmission by mid-2025.
Speaking about the resurgence of poliovirus this year, she said that 39 polio cases have been reported this year which highlights that the Programme is maintaining effective disease surveillance and not missing the virus anywhere in the country.
“Protecting our children from the scourge of polio remains our collective topmost priority,” she said. “While we are concerned about the surge, every new virus detection is taken as an opportunity to better understand the current dynamics of virus transmission which in turn helps us in refining the response and curb its further spread.”
The Prime Minister’s Focal Person said the upcoming nationwide campaign, scheduled to begin on October 28, is a significant step towards countering the spread of poliovirus and highlighted the media’s role in creating a positive environment for vaccine acceptance.
Ms Ayesha Raza said: “The media has traditionally been a great ally of the Polio Programme and plays an essential role in shaping public perception and ensuring accurate information is disseminated. To defeat polio, we need your continued help in promoting vaccination and good hygiene practices, enhancing the risk perception about polio as a devastating disease and combatting misinformation about the vaccine which is a real challenge in the age of digital media and causes parents to refuse the vaccine or hide their children from vaccinators.”
NEOC Coordinator Muhammed Anwarul Haq highlighted the programme’s 2-4-6 roadmap, a strategic roadmap made in consultation with the provinces and aimed at interrupting poliovirus transmission by mid-2025. “With the government’s backing, we are implementing multiple high-quality vaccination campaigns and outbreak responses while improving routine immunization and addressing vaccine hesitancy. Surveillance has been enhanced to track the virus, and we expect more cases to emerge in the coming months as we continue to detect the virus in the environment,” he said.
The NEOC Coordinator said that the Programme is planning two more polio vaccination campaigns before the end of December to boost children’s immunity against polio. “With the upcoming polio campaigns, the support of the media will remain essential for us to help create a conducive environment for vaccination and build community trust.”
The session underscored the need for national media outlets to play an active role in covering vaccination campaigns, promoting accurate narratives, and countering misinformation. The Polio Programme aims to work closely with journalists to ensure that the importance of vaccination is effectively communicated to the public.
Note for Editor:
Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by poliovirus mainly affecting children under the age of five years. It invades the nervous system and can cause paralysis or even death. While there is no cure for polio, vaccination is the most effective way to protect children from this crippling disease. Each time a child under the age of five is vaccinated, their protection against the virus is increased. Repeated immunisations have protected millions of children from polio, allowing almost all countries in the world to become polio-free. Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two remaining polio endemic countries globally.
For further information, please contact: Ms. Hania Naeem, Communications Officer, NEOC, +923431101988
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