Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Pakistan: 3 More Polio Workers Murdered

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# 8201

 

This headline is sadly becoming all too common, as once again attacks on polio workers have claimed multiple lives in Pakistan.  This report from The Hindu.

 

Updated: January 21, 2014 20:00 IST

Three polio workers killed in Karachi

Armed men on motorcycles opened fire on a polio team in Karachi fatally injuring three members including two women, in Qayyumabad area in Karachi East on Tuesday.

The polio vaccination drive had entered its second day today and now the members are unwilling to go ahead with the drive, according to unofficial sources. The polio team comprising four people was targeted while they were administering the oral polio vaccine in a crowded area of the city.

Sindh province reported six cases of the total 91 in 2013 and four of them were from Karachi. The polio drive was aimed at immunising over seven million children and was to continue for a couple of days.

(Continue . . .)

 

The campaign against immunization by the Taliban began eight years ago, but appears to have gained greater ferocity after it was disclosed that a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign was used as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden  (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

Additionally, many believe that vaccinations are part of a Western plot to sterilize Muslims, a notion that some local clerics have helped foster.

 

The recent detection of Polio in Syria (see WHO: Update On Polio Detection In Syria) has been genetically linked to a  poliovirus circulating in Pakistan, making the containment and eradication of this virus in that country a global concern.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Pakistan: 3 More Polio Workers Killed

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# 8069

 

Via Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, we get the sad news that another series of attacks has killed three Polio workers and/or their protection details in Pakistan.  Over the past year we’ve seen a number of horrific coordinated attacks made against aid workers, either involved with or associated with the Polio Vaccination drives in Pakistan.

 

Friday, December 13, 2013

Pakistan

Three Killed After Pakistan Resumes Antipolio Campaign

At least three people have been killed in Pakistan's tribal areas after the resumption of an antipolio campaign.


RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal reports that gunmen shot and killed two police officers assigned to protect a team of polio-vaccination workers in northwestern Pakistan.

The incident occurred north of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, on December 13.
Reports said the attackers fled the scene.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

In a second incident, Esmattulah Wazir, a political administrator in the tribal areas, said unknown assailants shot dead a polio worker named Yousef in his home.

(Continue . . . )

The campaign against immunization by the Taliban began eight years ago, but appears to have gained greater ferocity after it was disclosed that a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign was used as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden  (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

Additionally, many believe that vaccinations are part of a Western plot to sterilize Muslims, a notion that some local clerics have helped foster.

 

The recent detection of Polio in Syria (see WHO: Update On Polio Detection In Syria) has been genetically linked to a  poliovirus circulating in Pakistan, making the containment and eradication of this virus in that country a global concern.

Monday, October 07, 2013

Pakistan: Bomb Attack On Polio Vaccination Protection Team Kills 2

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# 7841

 

The violent campaign against the polio vaccination effort in Pakistan continues, with a fresh bomb attack in a Peshawar suburb on a van that killed two, and injured more than a dozen others.  Most of those injured appear to be police officers, or other members of the protection team.

 

This report from Aljazeera News.

 

 

Pakistan polio campaign disrupted by attack

Police van protecting polio vaccination team in Peshawar suburb hit by blast, killing two people and wounding 12 others.

Last Modified: 07 Oct 2013 09:02

A bomb hitting a police van protecting a polio vaccination team in northwest Pakistan has killed two people and wounded 12 others, police said.

The attack took place on the third and last day of a UN-backed vaccination campaign in a suburb of the city of Peshawar on Monday, police said, adding that a policeman was among the two dead.

Najeebur Rehman, a senior police official, said those killed were a police officer and a member of a volunteer peace committee. He said the bomb went off just as officers reached the village to provide security to polio teams administering anti-polio vaccine to local residents..

(Continue . . . )

 

Over the past ten months we’ve seen horrific coordinated attacks made against aid workers, either involved with or associated with the Polio Vaccination drives in Pakistan.

 

The first attack (see Pakistan: 6 Polio Workers Murdered) was reported on December 18th, the next day (see Pakistan: Fresh Attacks On WHO/UNICEF Polio Workers) we learned of 3 more deaths, and on January 1st  the headlines read : 7 More Aid Workers Killed In Pakistan.

 

Since then additional attacks have occurred, often resulting in temporary suspension of their vaccination efforts. Pakistan is one of 3 countries where the polio virus is still endemic (the others being Afghanistan and Nigeria).

 

The Pakistan attacks may be related to the Taliban’s condemnation of polio immunization campaigns after the use of a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).  Additionally, many believe that vaccinations are part of a Western plot to sterilize Muslims, a notion that some local clerics have helped foster.

 

In their GAR update of September 20th, 2013 on Poliovirus detected from environmental samples in Israel and West Bank and Gaza Strip  the World Health Organization advised:

 

It is important that all polio-free countries, in particular those with frequent travel and contacts with poliovirus-affected countries and areas, strengthen surveillance for cases of acute flaccid paralysis in order to rapidly detect any new virus importations and to facilitate a rapid response. Countries, territories and areas should also maintain uniformly high routine immunization coverage at the district level to minimize the consequences of any new virus introduction.

WHO’s 'International Travel and Health' recommends that all travellers to and from poliovirus-affected countries and areas be fully vaccinated against polio. Three countries remain endemic for indigenous transmission of wild poliovirus virus: Afghanistan, Nigeria and Pakistan. Additionally, in 2013, the Horn of Africa has been affected by an outbreak of wild poliovirus type 1.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

USGS: 7.8 Magnitude Earthquake In Pakistan

 

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# 7806

 

A strong (preliminary 7.8 magnitude), relatively shallow (15 km) earthquake struck the Awaran district of Pakistan this morning, quickly followed by a 5.9 aftershock.  Awaran is considered one of the poorest regions of Pakistan, reportedly with many poorly constructed buildings. 

 

The USGS Pager Alert System  (RED) estimates indicate that could range from 1,000-10,000  and property damage could be extensive.

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Selected cities affected include:

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Local reports indicate the shaking lasted as long as 2 minutes.  Damage reports are sparse at this time.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Pakistan: Gunmen Kill Two More Anti-Polio Workers

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# 7402

 

The carnage in Pakistan continues, with twin attacks yesterday in the southwest – including an assault on a hospital – claiming at least 25 lives, and today, reports of two more anti-polio workers murdered in northwest Pakistan.

 

This from the Associated Press:

 

Gunmen in Pakistan kill 2 anti-polio workers

Sunday, 16 June 2013 

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pakistani police say gunmen have killed two anti-polio workers in northwest Pakistan.


Swabi District Police Chief Mohammad Saeed says the two Pakistani health workers were killed Sunday while on a vaccination drive in Kandar village.

 

He says gunmen arrived on foot and later disappeared.

 

(Continue . . . )


 

AFP is carrying a similar report, although they report the gunmen rode a motorbike.  In either event, this is just the latest in a series of deadly attacks on anti-polio workers in Pakistan.

 

Over the past 6 months we’ve seen horrific coordinated attacks made against aid workers, either involved with or associated with the Polio Vaccination drives in Pakistan.

 

The first attack (see Pakistan: 6 Polio Workers Murdered) was reported on December 18th, the next day (see Pakistan: Fresh Attacks On WHO/UNICEF Polio Workers) we learned of 3 more deaths, and on January 1st  the headlines read : 7 More Aid Workers Killed In Pakistan.

 

Since then, additional attacks have occurred, often resulting in temporary suspension of their vaccination efforts. Pakistan is one of 3 countries where the polio virus is still endemic (the others being Afghanistan and Nigeria).

 

The Pakistan attacks appear related to the Taliban’s  condemnation of polio immunization campaigns after the use of a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Pakistan: Another Polio Vaccination Related Murder

 

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# 6969

 

The murderous vendetta against polio vaccination teams in Pakistan continues with word today that a policeman was killed in the northwestern town of Mardan while guarding a team of polio vaccination workers.

 

Over the past 2 and a half months we’ve seen horrific coordinated attacks made against aid workers, either involved with or associated with the Polio Vaccination drives in Pakistan.

 

The first attack (see Pakistan: 6 Polio Workers Murdered) was reported on December 18th, the next day (see Pakistan: Fresh Attacks On WHO/UNICEF Polio Workers) we learned of 3 more deaths, and on January 1st  the headlines read : 7 More Aid Workers Killed In Pakistan.

 

Since then, additional attacks have occurred. Pakistan is one of 3 countries where the polio virus is still endemic (the others being Afghanistan and Nigeria).

 

Nigeria has also seen violence directed at polio workers. Earlier this month we saw Nigeria: Nine Polio Workers Murdered, presumably as part of a larger effort to impose Sharia law in Nigeria by a militant Islamist group.

 

The Pakistan attacks appear related to the Taliban’s  condemnation of polio immunization campaigns after the use of a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

This from AFP.

 

Policeman killed in fresh attack on polio team

AFP

PESHAWAR: A policeman was shot dead Tuesday while protecting a polio vaccination team, police said, bringing the death toll in such attacks to 20 since December.

 

No one has claimed responsibility for the killings.

 

Tuesday’s killing happened at Ghalla Dher on the outskirts of the northwestern town of Mardan, on the second day of a three-day local anti-polio campaign.

(Continue . . . )

Monday, January 21, 2013

Twitter Updates From Pakistan On Polio Virus Detected In Egypt

 

 

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# 6872

 

 

Details are just beginning to emerge on the recent discovery of polio viruses in samples taken from Cairo’s sewage system (see earlier Polio Virus Detected By Environmental Surveillance In Egypt). 

 

My thanks to Ronan Kelly on FluTrackers for picking up the following  tweet stream released over the past hour or so  from Pakistan’s PM Monitoring & Coordination Cell for Polio (Facebook Page).

 

https://twitter.com/PMsPolioE

 

WHO in Pakistan has reported that wild poliovirus type-1 (WPV-1) has recently been imported to Egypt from Sukkur district of Pakistan.

 

The Poliovirus WPV-1 was isolated in sewage water samples collected from two different sites in Cairo, Egypt in December 2012.

 

The Genetic analysis indicates origin of virus frm Sukkur distrct confrming tht thr is an importation of poliovirus frm Pakistan into Egypt

 

Earlier the outbreak of polio in People’s Republic of China in 2011 was also traced back to the circulation in North Sindh.

 

There is an ongoing sharing of poliovirus circulation between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

 

imposing pre-travel vaccination against polio on Pak citizens travelling abroad; has already been recommended by the IMB issued in Nov 2012.

 

PM Polio Cell, WHO, UNICEF recommended to install polio counters at all international immigration points of Pakistan.

Polio Virus Detected By Environmental Surveillance In Egypt

 

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Child receiving Polio Vaccine – CDC PHIL

 


# 6871

 

 

Earlier today a media story of Polio being discovered in Egypt (which has been free of the disease since 2004) began began circulating via several Middle Eastern sources. I’ve held off reporting this until I could find a second source (see below).

 

First the original report from Pakistan Today.  What wasn’t immediately clear from this report is whether any actual polio infections have been identified in Egypt (they apparently haven’t):

 

Polio spreads from Pakistan to Egypt

MONITORING DESK

A state of emergency has been declared in Egypt’s Alexandria and Cairo after authorities found spread of polio virus in the two cities, reportedly transferred to the country from Pakistan.

 

Meanwhile, Prime Minister’s Polio Monitoring Cell in Pakistan has directed all provincial governments to set up polio counters at airports and all internal and external routes across the country.

 

In a joint statement, World Health Organisation, UNICEF and Polio Monitoring Cell have termed this situation as critical and alarming for the anti-polio campaign in Pakistan.

(Continue . . .)

From AFP we learn that samples of the poliovirus have been detected in sewage samples taken in Cairo, Egypt, and they closely match those found in Pakistan.

 

Polio virus found in Egypt linked to Pakistan: officials

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health officials on Monday called for infants leaving the country to be issued polio vaccinations at airports after virus samples linked to a southern Pakistani city were discovered in Egypt.

 

Two sewage samples from Cairo were analysed and found to resemble a recently discovered strain in the city of Sukkur, a joint statement by health officials, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Unicef said.

(Continue . . . )

 

 

Sampling of sewage samples for the poliovirus has increasingly become part of the surveillance effort on polio, since only 1 person in 100 who becomes infected actually develops the acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) we normally associate with the disease.


Everyone who is infected, however, sheds large quantities of the virus in their feces for weeks, making environmental sampling of sewage an efficient method of determining the presence of the virus in the community.

 

From the Polio Global Eradication Initiative.

 

Acute Flaccid Paralysis (AFP) surveillance

Nationwide AFP (acute flaccid paralysis) surveillance is the gold standard for detecting cases of poliomyelitis. The four steps of surveillance are:

  1. finding and reporting children with acute flaccid paralysis (AFP)

  2. transporting stool samples for analysis

  3. isolating and identifying poliovirus in the laboratory

  4. mapping the virus to determine the origin of the virus strain.

Environmental surveillance

Environmental surveillance involves testing sewage or other environmental samples for the presence of poliovirus. Environmental surveillance often confirms wild poliovirus infections in the absence of cases of paralysis. Systematic environmental sampling (e.g. in Egypt and Mumbai, India) provides important supplementary surveillance data. Ad-hoc environmental surveillance elsewhere (especially in polio-free regions) provides insights into the international spread of poliovirus.

 

Vaccination of all children under the age of 5 has been ordered in the regions where the virus has been detected in the environment. 

Friday, January 04, 2013

Pakistan To Resume Polio Vaccinations

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# 6822

 

 

Three times in recent weeks we’ve seen horrific coordinated attacks made against aid workers, either involved with or associated with the Polio Vaccination drives in Pakistan.

 

The first attack (see Pakistan: 6 Polio Workers Murdered) was reported on December 18th, the next day (see Pakistan: Fresh Attacks On WHO/UNICEF Polio Workers) we learned of 3 more deaths, and on January 1st  the headlines read : 7 More Aid Workers Killed In Pakistan.

 

 

Pakistan is one of 3 countries where the polio virus is still endemic (the others being Afghanistan and Nigeria).

 

Taliban leaders condemned polio immunization campaigns after the use of a sham hepatitis vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

Today, news from Agence France-Presse that rather than reinstituting a high profile national vaccine campaign, small well-guarded teams will begin local, targeted and low profile vaccination campaigns.

 

Security measures include excluding female health workers from participating in some of the higher risk zones, and banning motorcycles in and around vaccination sites in an attempt to prevent drive-by shootings.

 

Follow the link below for further details from AFP.

 

Pakistan resumes polio vaccines under tight security

Published on 04 Jan 2013

 

 

For more perspective on why Pakistan’s vaccination program is considered so vital by many public health authorities, we have this excellent report by CIDRAP NEWS editor Robert Roos.

 

 

WHO says polio drive must push on despite Pakistan setbacks

Robert Roos * News Editor

Jan 3, 2013 (CIDRAP News) – In the wake of recent killings of polio vaccinators in Pakistan, some questions are being raised about the all-out push to eradicate polio, but the World Health Organization (WHO) says the world can't afford to back off on the eradication drive now.

 

"We've never had so few cases or such a small footprint of the virus, so we know this opportunity is not going to come back," Sona Bari, the WHO's polio eradication spokesperson, told CIDRAP News. "We've never been here before. It's now or never."

(Continue . . . )

 

The above is a small excerpt of a very long, and informative article. Well worth reading in its entirety.

Tuesday, January 01, 2013

7 More Aid Workers Killed In Pakistan

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# 6813

 

On this first day of 2013, more horrendous news out of Pakistan, where last month 9 health care workers involved in a vaccination campaign were murdered (see Pakistan: Fresh Attacks On WHO/UNICEF Polio Workers).

 

Today, news that a doctor and six aid workers were ambushed and killed by unknown gunmen after leaving a children’s community center. 

 

Although no one has claimed credit for today’s act, aid workers have been repeatedly targeted by religious and political groups in Pakistan for assassination, assault, and kidnapping.  

 

Local Taliban leaders banned Polio immunization campaigns after the use of a sham vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

Details are still emerging on today’s attack. So far, the reporting on today’s incident has come from Reuters.

 

Gunmen in Pakistan shoot dead 7 aid workers near capital

Tue, 1 Jan 2013 11:43 GMT

Source: reuters // Reuters

(Updates death toll, adds man was a doctor)

By Jibran Ahmad

PESHAWAR, Pakistan Jan 1 (Reuters) - Gunmen ambushed and shot dead six Pakistani women aid workers and a male doctor on Tuesday, police said.

 

Their vehicle was raked with gunfire as they returned home from work at a children's community centre run by Pakistani charity Ujala, or Light, said district police officer Abdur Rashid Khan. Their driver was seriously wounded in the attack.

(Continue . . .)

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Pakistan: 6 Polio Workers Murdered

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# 6789

 

 

Reports are still coming in, but we’ve the horrendous news this morning that 6 UN polio vaccination workers in Pakistan have been murdered in the past 24 hours.

 

Pakistan is one of only three countries where polio remains endemic (along with Afghanistan and Nigeria), and Monday marked the beginning of a new WHO sponsored vaccination campaign.

 

Local Taliban leaders banned immunization after the use of an earlier vaccination campaign as a CIA cover in the pursuit of Osama Bin Laden (see Maryn McKenna’s Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA).

 

A few of the news reports coming out this morning include:

 

Six polio workers shot dead in Pakistan

By Hasan Mansoor (AFP)

KARACHI — Gunmen in Pakistan have killed six health workers at the start of a nationwide polio vaccination drive, officials said Tuesday, highlighting resistance to a campaign opposed by the Taliban.

Gunmen kill five polio workers in Pakistan

KARACHI: Gunmen shot five health workers on an anti-polio drive in a string of attacks in Pakistan on Tuesday, officials said, raising fears for the safety of workers immunizing children against the crippling disease.

Gunmen Kill Anti-Polio Workers in Attacks in Pakistan

By SALMAN MASOOD
Published: December 18, 2012 ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Gunmen killed five women and a man on Tuesday in separate attacks on workers in a national drive to eradicate polio in Pakistan, officials said.

Family members mourned the death of Nasima Bibi, a female worker with an anti-polio drive campaign in Pakistan, who was shot by gunmen on Tuesday.

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Pakistan: Naegleria Fowleri Blamed For 10 Deaths

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L & R: Trophozoites of N. fowleri in brain tissue, stained with H&E. Center: Ameboflagellate trophozoite of N. fowleri. Credit: DPDx

 

# 6619

 

 

Naegleria fowleri, commonly called the `brain eating amoeba’, has been blamed for 10 deaths in Karachi, Pakistan over the summer according to a Pakistani official with the World Health Organization.

 


The AP is reporting this morning that Musa Khan, the head of Pakistan’s DEWS (Disease Early Warning System), announced that the deaths occurred between March and September.

 

You may recall that I mentioned this outbreak, and the ongoing coverage by the newshounds on FluTrackers  (see this thread) back in July.

 

While it is exceedingly rare, we hear of a few fatal cases of PAM (Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis) each year caused by this water-borne organism.

 

It is usually acquired while swimming in warm lakes and streams, but last year we saw a couple of cases in Louisiana related to the use of Neti Pots for nasal irrigation (see FDA Advice On Safe Use Of Neti Pots).

 

Is Rinsing Your Sinuses Safe? - (JPG)

Photo Credit FDA

 

Nasal irrigation is practiced daily by many in the Muslim community, and is suspected to be the route by which these Pakistani infections were acquired.

 

Several years ago nasal irrigation with N. fowleri contaminated tap water in Karachi, Pakistan was suspected to have caused 13 cases over 18 months. The CDC’s EID journal carried a dispatch on this outbreak in 2011:

 

 

Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis Caused by Naegleria fowleri, Karachi, Pakistan

Sadia Shakoor, Mohammad Asim Beg, Syed Faisal MahmoodComments to Author , Rebecca Bandea, Rama Sriram, Fatima Noman, Farheen Ali, Govinda S. Visvesvara, and Afia Zafar
Abstract

We report 13 cases of Naegleria fowleri primary amebic meningoencephalitis in persons in Karachi, Pakistan, who had no history of aquatic activities. Infection likely occurred through ablution with tap water. An increase in primary amebic meningoencephalitis cases may be attributed to rising temperatures, reduced levels of chlorine in potable water, or deteriorating water distribution systems.

 

 

This latest outbreak has inspired heated debate over the water quality in Pakistan’s largest city (pop 13 million).   This report from today’s Express Tribune:

 

Despite low chlorine level, KWSB insists there’s nothing fowl(eri)

By Saad Hasan / Samia Malik

Published: October 9, 2012

KARACHI:

As more cases of the deadly illness caused by the amoeba Naegleria fowleri continue to surface, officials have started wrangling with one another over the quality of water that runs through the city’s pipelines.

 

<SNIP>

 

The managing director of KWSB, Misbahuddin Fareed, said on Monday that the results showed that the level of chlorine was indeed low – it was 0.15 (parts per million) ppm when it should have been at least 0.5 ppm.

 

Despite this, the manager refused to believe that the water was contaminated and asked Aga Khan University to conduct research to determine whether the water did indeed carry the organism. “Our water is running water anyway. It does not stagnate and allow germs to multiply.” He said that the organisation checks the quantity of water every three hours.

(Continue . . .)

 

Since millions of people swim in waters where this amoeba naturally occur (or are otherwise exposed) and only a small handful of infections result, the odds of acquiring this infection are extraordinarily low.

 

Still, as this infection is almost always fatal, that makes the advice of using distilled, sterile or previously boiled water in your neti pot a reasonable enough precaution.

 

The Florida Department of Health has some common sense safety advice on how to avoid this parasite.

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Photo Credit – Florida DOH

 

For more information on the Naegleria parasite, you can visit the CDC’s Naegleria webpage.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

WHO/UNICEF Statement On Shooting Of Polio Team Doctor

 

 

# 6444

 

Overnight word came down that a doctor working with the polio eradication effort in Pakistan had been shot and killed.   This was the second shooting incident in a week involving the polio teams in that country.

 

Today, we’ve a joint statement from the World Health Organization  and UNICEF on this tragic incident.

 

 

 

Polio eradication worker shot and killed in Karachi, Pakistan

Joint WHO/UNICEF Statement
21 July 2012

21 July 2012 | KARACHI, PAKISTAN/New York/Geneva - The World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF are deeply saddened by the killing of Mr. Muhammad Ishaq, a local community worker who was part of the Polio Eradication Initiative in Pakistan.

 

Mr. Ishaq was shot and killed in the Gadap town area of Karachi on Friday evening.

 

Polio immunization activities were suspended in this area of Karachi earlier this week after a shooting incident injured two WHO staff members who were supporting the implementation and monitoring of a vaccination campaign.

 

Until activities were suspended, Mr. Ishaq had worked with the national polio eradication effort as a Union Council Polio Worker for several months, helping to plan and implement vaccination campaigns to protect the most underserved and vulnerable children against this debilitating disease.

 

Because of the dedication of every-day heroes like Mr. Ishaq, Pakistan is this year closer than ever to the eradication of polio. He was known for his dedication and diligence to immunize all children against polio.

 

Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus that can cause permanent paralysis in a matter of hours. There is no cure, but there are safe and effective vaccines. Polio can be eradicated if every child is immunized until transmission stops worldwide.

 

Currently the disease remains endemic in only three countries: Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. Mr. Ishaq was one of the thousands of people across Pakistan who worked selflessly in the battle to eradicate polio.

 

WHO, UNICEF and all of the polio partners in Pakistan and globally express their deepest sympathy to his family for this tragic loss. The partners of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative remain committed to supporting the Government of Pakistan and the people of Pakistan in their efforts to eradicate this devastating disease.

 

 

The polio eradication efforts in Pakistan have been under recent threat by Taliban militants who have vowed that the vaccination campaign cannot proceed until the United States ceases drone strikes in their country.

 

There is also speculation that these attacks may also be a backlash against the CIA ruse that used a fake vaccination program in Pakistan as a front to cover their the hunt for Osama bin Laden last year.

 

For more details on that story, I would invite you to visit Maryn McKenna’ blog  Update: Pakistan, Polio, Fake Vaccines And The CIA.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Pakistan’s War Of Words On Bird Flu

 

 

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Photo Credit – FAO

 

# 6003

 

 

Yesterday Pakistan’s Daily Times carried a report highly critical of the government’s lack of measures to combat the bird flu virus written by Asad Farooq called:

 

Bird flu threat looms large over Pakistan

KARACHI: Inappropriate policies, lapses in the 18th Amendment and prolonged delay in departmental procedures have pushed the country towards the deadliest viral disease of ‘bird flu’ at a time when the country is already facing severe problems due to dengue virus.


A large number of birds migrate from Europe to the South Asian countries, including Pakistan during the winter season, which according to the experts, are the core source of viral diseases, particularly the bird flu. So far tens of thousands of migratory birds along with the significant alarms of bird flu have arrived in the country.

(Continue . . .)

 

This story goes on to criticize the recent dismantling of Pakistan’s National Programme for the Control and Prevention of Avian & Pandemic Influenza, which critics worry leaves Pakistan susceptible to a return of the H5N1 virus.

 

Today, the Business Recorder has a stern rebuttal to these claims, where health officials reportedly reject the concerns printed in the Daily Times.

 

No threats of bird flu in Pakistan

Monday, 12 December 2011 18:10

ISLAMABAD: Health experts on Monday rejected the news item which mentioned that threat of bird flu looms large over Pakistan and said it is all misinformation.

Experts also brushed aside the concept that migratory birds were carrier of any viral disease, and mentioned that these birds are not source or carrier of bird flu.

(Continue . . . )

 

 

These denials are similar to those we’ve seen in the past, including back in 2007 when a cluster of human cases (see EID Journal: Unraveling Pakistan’s H5N1 Outbreak) made headlines.

 

Again, in 2008 we saw some remarkable statements regarding the H5N1 virus come out of Pakistan (see Bird Flu, Propaganda, and Conspiracy Theories  and PPA Slams Bird Flu `Propaganda'), the gist being that fears over bird flu were `overblown’ and that it was all a conspiracy mounted against Pakistan’s poultry industry.

 

 

Today’s  assertions that wild birds `are not carriers of any viral disease’ and are not the `source or carrier of bird flu’ certainly fly against the available evidence.

 

The FAO, in their warning on the new 2.3.2.1 clade of the H5N1 virus issued last August (see FAO Warns On Bird Flu) states:

 

Virus spread in both poultry and wild birds


At the same time, 2008 marked the beginning of renewed geographic expansion of the H5N1 virus both in poultry and wild birds.

 

The advance appears to be associated with migratory bird movements, according to FAO Chief Veterinary Officer Juan Lubroth. He said migrations help the virus travel over long distances, so that H5N1 has in the past 24 months shown up in poultry or wild birds in countries that had been virus-free for several years.

 

"Wild birds may introduce the virus, but peoples' actions in poultry production and marketing spread it," Lubroth noted.

(Continue . . )

 

And of course we’ve seen numerous occasions where migratory birds have tested positive for a variety of avian flu strains, including H5N1. 

 

Last March, in  Study: The Role Of Migratory Birds In Spreading Bird Flu, we saw a plausible mechanism for the H5N1 virus to be spread from domesticated poultry to wild birds during the winter, and from there relayed primarily by asymptomatic birds along the migratory pathways. 

 

And for more evidence linking migratory birds, and the spread of avian influenza, you may wish to revisit.

 

Korea: Migratory Birds Behind Spread Of H5N1

EID Journal: H5N1 Branching Out

Japan: Hooded Crane Positive For H5N1

FAO: On The Trail Of Avian Influenza

 

 

While there are still unanswered questions regarding how much of contribution migratory birds make towards the global spread of avian flu, the evidence is overwhelming that they play at least some role.

 

All of which makes today’s renewed protestations that `bird flu poses no threat to Pakistan’, and that it is all an attempt to `shamble the business of poultry’ ring just a bit hollow.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Referral: Maryn McKenna On The Reported CIA Vaccination Ruse

 

 


# 5690

 


Over the past 24 hours the media, and that includes the Internet’s blogosphere, has been filled with reactions over the reported (by the Guardian Newspaper, and the NY Times) `vaccination ruse’ used by CIA operatives in Pakistan to try to obtain Osama Bin Laden’s DNA.

 

While this may seem like small potatoes to some people, Maryn McKenna has penned a terrific article today on why this was a extraordinarily bad idea.

 

The best thing I can do is step aside, and let you go read:

 

File Under WTF: Did the CIA Fake a Vaccination Campaign?

Thursday, July 07, 2011

WHO: Polio In Pakistan

 

 


# 5678

 

Since 1988 when the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) was launched, there has been a a 99% reduction in the incidence of Polio around the globe. 

 

As of 2006, the virus remained endemic in only four countries: India, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.


But since that time, 39 countries previously thought free of the virus have experienced outbreaks following importation of the wild polio virus.

 

Transmission of the disease has been reestablished  in Angola, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and Sudan (cite MMWR May 13, 2011 / 60(18);582-586).

 

 

In their most recent update (as of 6/28/11), the GPEI states:

 

  • There have been 241 cases globally in 2011 (216 wild poliovirus type 1 - WPV1 - and 25 WPV3), compared with 456 cases at the same time in 2010 (399 WPV1 and 57 WPV3).

  • Over 80% of cases this year come from just three countries: Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Pakistan.

 

 

Despite the progress made to date, eliminating that last 1% of the polio cases has proven to be more difficult than originally hoped. Remote areas in developing countries, places often embroiled in local conflicts, remain stubborn pockets of transmission.

 

 

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Photo Credit- MMWR

 

 

Today, the World Health Organization is reporting the first recorded instance of WPV3 (wild polio virus subtype 3) in Asia in 2011.  The case involves a 16 month old child in a remote area of Pakistan, and re-stokes concerns that this all-but-eliminated serotype continues to circulate.  

 

First a link to the WHO report, then a little more on WPV.

 

 

 

Poliomyelitis in Pakistan

7 July 2011 - Pakistan has reported wild poliovirus type 3 (WPV3) isolated from a 16-month old child with onset of paralysis on 9 June 2011, from a conflict-affected, inaccessible area of Khyber Agency, Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). This is the only case of WPV3 detected in Asia in 2011. WPV3 transmission in Asia is on the verge of elimination, with the last case occurring more than six months ago, on 18 November 2010 (also from Khyber Agency, FATA).

 

Confirmation of continuation of WPV3 transmission in tribal areas of Pakistan has significant implications for the global effort to eradicate WPV3, particularly as Asia is on the verge of eliminating circulation of this strain. The detection of WPV3 in Pakistan represents the risk that it may spread from this transmission focus to other WPV3-free areas of Asia and beyond. Globally, WPV3 transmission is at historically low levels in 2011, with other circulation of this strain restricted to parts of west Africa (17 cases in Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Mali and Niger), Nigeria (five cases) and Chad (three cases). The risk of onward spread of WPV3 is deemed as high by the World Health Organization (WHO), particularly given large-scale population movements within Pakistan, between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and expected large-scale population movements associated with Umrah and the upcoming Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) in the coming few months.

(Continue . . . )

 

 
 

A little background on the polio vaccine, and the return of the virus is in order.

 

There are three serotypes of Polio (WPV1, WPV2, and WPV3).  Serotype 2 was declared eradicated in 1998 only to re-emerge as a vaccine derived poliovirus (VDPV) in Nigeria in 2006. 

 

Since then, rare cases of VDPV have been reported around the world. They arise due to the use of the oral polio vaccine (or OPV), which uses a weakened (attenuated) live virus instead of the polio shot, which uses an inactivated virus.

 

The OPV is mainly used in developing countries since it is cheaper, and it doesn’t required trained medical personnel to administer.  As a side benefit, as a live-virus vaccine it is shed in feces, and can therefore indirectly inoculate other children via the fecal-oral route.

 

And most of the time, that works just fine. 


But rarely, particularly in children with weakened immune systems who may shed the virus for months, the virus can mutate back to its wild-type virulence, and re-enter the community.

 

As long as all children are fully vaccinated, that isn’t usually a problem.  But as countries approach a `polio free’ status, they often reduce their vaccination programs in order to save money. 

 

They may stop vaccinations entirely, or shift to using bivalent (type 1 & 3) oral vaccines, instead of the trivalent formulation. 

 

Either way, that can open the door for VDPV strains to emerge.

 

The CDC’s  Polio information page has this to say about Vaccine Derived Polio Viruses:

 

Is there a difference in a disease caused by a VDPV and one cause by wild poliovirus or OPV?

No, there is no clinical difference between paralytic polio caused by wild poliovirus, OPV, or VDPV.

I've heard that VDPV has been found recently in the United States. Is this true?

In 2005, a VDPV was found in the stool of an unvaccinated, immunocompromised child in the state of Minnesota. The child most likely caught the virus through contact in the community with someone who received live oral vaccine in another country 2 months prior. Subsequently, seven other unvaccinated children in the the child’s community were shown to have poliovirus infection. None of the infected children had paralysis. For more information specifically related to this case visit http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/199/3/391.full.pdf PDF document (exit) In 2009, an immunoncompromised adult developed vaccine-associated paralytic polio (VAPP) and died of polio-associated complications. VDPV was isolated, and the infection likely occurred where her child received OPV 12 years prior.

Where do vaccine-derived polioviruses come from, and should I be concerned if there is a case in the United States?

VDPVs can cause outbreaks in countries where vaccine coverage with OPV is low. Long-term excretion can also occur in people with certain immunodeficiency disorders. Because OPV has not been used in the United States since 2000 and vaccine coverage with IPV is high, it is unlikely that any vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) seen in the United States would become widespread.

 

Also, polio vaccination protects people against naturally occurring polioviruses and vaccine-derived polioviruses.

 

 

There are some scientists who fear that until developing countries move away from using the attenuated OPV -  and adopt the inactivated vaccine - that the last vestiges of polio will remain impossible to eradicate.

 

Today’s report deals with an increasingly rare wild-type serotype, as opposed to a vaccine derived variety.

 

While the battle against polio has not been completely won, the global elimination of the virus is tantalizingly within reach.

 

For more on the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) you can visit their website and read their strategic plan to eliminate this scourge over the next few years.

 

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Friday, May 20, 2011

EID Journal: Unraveling Pakistan’s H5N1 Outbreak

 

 

 

# 5564

 

 

A fascinating dispatch appears today in the CDC’s EID Journal that gives us new insight into Pakistan’s H5N1 human cluster of 2007, and suggests that the outbreak may have been larger than previously acknowledged.

 

First, a bit of history of this outbreak (if you remember it well, you can always skip it).

 

         *       *      *      *      *      *      *      *

 

On December 11th, 2007 in  A Strange Story Out Of Pakistan I wrote of the first media reports of a possible bird flu outbreak in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) of Pakistan.

 

Over the next few days we saw a procession of confused and often contradictory media reports at first suggesting that there were 8 cases, and 2 fatalities – but which would eventually be reduced to 4 `officially confirmed’ cases and 1 fatality  (see They Apparently Can't Find A Number They Like).

 

On December 15th, 2007 the World Health Organization released the following statement:

 

Avian influenza – situation in Pakistan

15 December 2007

The Ministry of Health in Pakistan has informed WHO of 8 suspected human cases of H5N1 avian influenza infection in the Peshawar area of the country. These cases were detected following a series of culling operations in response to outbreaks of H5N1 in poultry. One of the cases has now recovered and a further two suspected cases have since died.

(Continue  . . .)

 

 

You can find additional coverage of this outbreak in Deadlines, Threats, And Ultimatums, A Pakistani Update, and WHO: `No Change' In Pandemic Alert Level

 

On April 3rd, 2008 the WHO released an update where they identified a total of 4 cases in this outbreak - Avian influenza – situation in Pakistan - update 2.

 

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Some of the discrepancies in the case counts and death totals comes about due to the the first fatality – Case #2 – having been buried without actually being tested for the virus.  

 

Although the circumstantial evidence for his being infected is very strong, he isn’t `officially counted’ in the totals. 

 

Eventually the initial media furor, and concerns over extended H-2-H (human-to-human) transmission, faded away.  No new cases were detected in Pakistan, and the focus moved back to fresh cases in Indonesia, Egypt, and China.

 

In October of 2008 – nearly a year after the outbreak began - we got a detailed recap of the outbreak from the WHO’s Weekly Epidemiological Record (see WHO: Unraveling the 2007 Pakistan H5N1 Cluster).

 

The only big revelation in this wrap up was the confirmation of a 5th – asymptomatic case; the 33 year-old brother of Case #1 whose displayed an H5 antibody titre of 1:320 and a positive western blot assay.

 

And that is pretty much where this story has laid since that time. The official WHO count remains at 4 cases and 1 fatality (case #2 not being officially counted). 

 

         *       *      *      *      *      *      *      *

 

Officially, as of May 13th, the World Health Organization has documented 553 human infections with the H5N1 virus, with 323 fatalities. Along the way, there have been only a handful of confirmed H-2-H transmissions of the virus.

 

Unofficially, most observers grant that our surveillance methods are incapable of detecting all of the H1N1 cases out there, and that we are probably missing a significant number of them.

 

All of which serves as prelude to today’s EID Journal article called:

 

Volume 17, Number 6–June 2011
Dispatch

Human Infection with Avian Influenza Virus, Pakistan, 2007

Mukhtiar Zaman, Saadia Ashraf, Nancy A. Dreyer, and Stephen Toovey

 

A few excerpts (bolding mine):

 


Abstract

Human infection with avian influenza (H5N1) virus raises concern for the possibility of a pandemic. We report 20 cases, which ranged from asymptomatic to fatal, in Pakistan in 2007.

 

These cases indicate human-to-human-to-human transmission of this virus, and the number of cases may be higher than realized.

 

(EXCERPTS)

 

We identified 20 cases—4 laboratory confirmed, 7 likely, and 9 possible—resulting in a ratio of 4 likely/possible cases for each laboratory-confirmed case

                          ___________

The human-to-human transmission from the index case-patient to at least some household contacts seems clear, and the extended period over which these contacts became ill supports subsequent human-to-human transmission.

                          ___________

Figure 2 supports the conclusion that patient 2 initiated a chain of infection in which further human-to-human transmission to patients 7 and 8 occurred. Possible nosocomial transmission is of concern because full implementation of isolation procedures in resource-poor settings may be problematic.

                          ___________

Of concern is the 4:1 ratio of likely/possible to laboratory-confirmed cases, suggesting that official tallies understate true incidence of infection.

                          ___________

Factors that may contribute to undercounting are the difficulty of obtaining virologic confirmation or of storing and transporting samples in resource-poor settings and reluctance by relatives to consent to autopsy.

                          ___________

Another reason to believe that less fulminant cases may go unreported is the occurrence in Pakistan, and elsewhere, of clinically mild and asymptomatic cases (5,8–14), indicating that influenza (H5N1) virus may cause a spectrum of illness.

 

This dispatch is one of those good-news – bad-news type deals.  

 

The bad news is that these results from Pakistan suggest that human H5N1 infections and clusters (as many assume) are probably undercounted around the world.

 

The good news is that despite more human cases than we are aware of, the virus hasn’t managed to spark an ongoing and efficient chain of transmission.

 

The big open question is how many mild, sub-clinical, or asymptomatic infections occur in an exposed population. The follow up testing of contacts in the Pakistan cluster suggests that number may be higher than suspected.

 

The authors write:

 

Of note, patient 6 (a cousin of the index case-patient) had a microneutralization titer of 80 but a negative Western blot result. Although 4 contacts of patient 6 exhibited no signs or symptoms of influenza, they did have positive H5 microneutralization titers ranging from 80 to 160.

 

It should be noted that previous seroprevalence studies have failed to show much evidence of mild infections, although the data is limited.

 

In May of 2009 (see Cambodian Study Finds Rare Asymptomatic H5N1 Infections) we saw a seroprevalence study published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases  conducted on more than 600 members of a Cambodian village where 2 human H5N1 cases were detected in 2006.

 

Antibody titers showed that only 1% (7 of 674) of the villagers tested had contracted, and fought off, the H5N1 virus.   A figure much lower than many had expected.

 

Another study – presented at the Options For Influenza Control VI  Conference in Toronto in 2007, came up with similar results (see Seroprevalence Study).

 

Which, if we are to resolve this impasse, leaves us sorely in need of better and more frequent H5N1 seroprevalence studies from around the world.

 


While this report expands the Pakistani H5N1 cluster size by 7 likely and 9 possible cases the official count remains at 4 laboratory confirmed cases

 

In conclusion, the authors write:

 

Several features of the outbreak are unusual or give cause for concern: human-to-human-to-human transmission, possible nosocomial transmission, occurrence of mild and asymptomatic cases, and difficulties of establishing laboratory confirmation of likely and possible cases (which also prevented genotypic matching of specimens from primary and putative secondary cases).

 

Taken together, these features suggest that current surveillance might undercount the extent of human infection with influenza (H5N1) virus and that human-to-human transmission might possibly be associated with less severe disease.

 

 

Which is why – despite H5N1’s failure thus far to spark a pandemic - researchers continue to watch this virus intently, looking for any signs that it is adapting to human physiology. 

Monday, October 25, 2010

WHO On Cholera/CCHF/Dengue Outbreaks In Pakistan

 

 



# 5010

 

 


Two updates today from the World Health Organization on the ongoing outbreaks of several infectious diseases in Pakistan.

 

First, Cholera – which like in Africa and now Haiti, has also been sporadically reported in the flood affected provinces of Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

 

Cholera in Pakistan

25 October 2010 -- On 12 October 2010, the Ministry of Health in Pakistan reported laboratory confirmation of 99 cases of Vibrio cholera 01 in the country. These cases were laboratory-confirmed by the National Institute of Health since the beginning of the flood until 30 September 2010. These cases have been reported sporadically from a wide geographical area in the flood-affected provinces of Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

 

The Ministry of Health in Pakistan supported by the World Health Organization and other local and international partners are collaborating closely to prevent outbreaks of any disease, including cholera, and treat people affected by such illnesses. More than 60 diarrhoeal treatment centres are either operating or are soon to start functioning in the 46 most affected districts of the country.

 

Diarrhoeal diseases including cholera are among the most reported health conditions in many locations affected by the recent floods disaster in the country.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
WHO cholera Fact sheet
WHO Pakistan web site

 

 

Next, since the end of September we’ve been watching reports of heightened transmission of CCHF – normally a tick-borne illness – being reported in several areas of Pakistan. 

 

As you can see from this WHO map, CCHF is not uncommon in this part of the world.

 

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While I’ve been tempted to blog on this outbreak for a couple of weeks, quite frankly the reports I’ve seen have been inconsistent and confusing.

 

Over the past month we’ve suggestions of nosocomial transmission among health care workers, denials, retractions, and revisions of numbers as these ProMed Mail dispatches demonstrate.

 

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (09): (NW)

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (08): (PB), not

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (07): revised data, WHO

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (06): (PB)

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (05): (NW)

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (04): (PB)

PRO/AH/EDR> Crimean-Congo hem. fever - Pakistan (03): (PB) nosocomial

 

 

Today, a rather generic update from the WHO that suffers from a lack of detail. 

 

Nothing is said about exactly where these cases occurred, or about the mode of transmission, leaving much uncertainty.

 

Things are, however, still in a state of flux in the wake of the unprecedented flooding disaster last month in that nation, and so some of this ambiguity may be understandable. 

 

 

Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF) and Dengue in Pakistan

25 October 2010 -- As of 15 October, the IHR National Focal Point, Ministry of Health (MoH), Pakistan, has notified WHO of 26 cases, including 3 deaths, of Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF). In addition, over 1500 laboratory-confirmed cases of dengue fever including 15 deaths have also been reported from Pakistan so far.

 

Both CCHF and dengue fever are endemic in Pakistan with seasonal rise in cases. However, recently, the transmission of both CCHF and dengue fever has intensified in the country with increased incidence and geographic expansion. The recent Pakistan floods may have contributed to this upsurge as a result of changes in risk factors for these diseases.

Operational response

The MoH has scaled up response activities to prevent and mitigate CCHF and dengue fever, including awareness-raising campaigns on exposure risks and preventive measures for the general public, strengthening clinical and case management of patients with haemorrhagic fevers, stockpiling appropriate drugs and personal protective equipment, and implementing targeted vector control activities.

 

Upon request from the MoH in Pakistan, WHO is mobilizing experts in the clinical management of severe dengue fever and in infection control in health care settings through the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN). WHO is also assisting the country with resource mobilization, strengthening disease surveillance, laboratory diagnostics, and training of health care providers.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
WHO dengue website
WHO CCHF website