If Ebola hits Pakistan


This infection produces a range of mild to deadly reactions in people, from complete resistance to moderate to severe illness, followed by recovery and then to excessive bleeding, organ failure and death

Like HIV, Ebola is not airborne

Touching the blood and body fluids of a patient, as well as contaminated objects like needles, transmits the virus

Even though Ebola has mostly affected West Africa, with only nine reported cases in the US and a few sporadic ones in Europe, most developed countries have stepped up their response to the deadly virus by implementing travel restrictions and mandatory quarantines of people returning from Ebola-stricken countries

Interestingly, whereas a large part of the debate in western countries centres on implementing adequate measures to contain the virus without turning caregivers and patients into pariahs, in Pakistan, the government evidently doesn’t think we are actually at any risk from this deadly disease at all

How else do you explain the fact that the government’s response to the virus has largely focused on bureaucratic measures involving the establishment of ‘steering committees’ and ‘focal persons’, which sound good on paper but are fairly ineffective without the mobilisation of resources and some kind of accountability

Most airlines operating in the country’s airspace are not complying with national (Personal Declaration of Health and Origin Rule), and international requirements (International Health regulations 2005, International Civil Aviation Organisation Regulation) of collecting information on passengers’ health status

Health forms are not always given out to passengers and even if they are duly filled, they are often not collected by airport authorities

Some airlines like PIA and Shaheen Air International have reportedly refused a medical examination of their food handlers

Moreover, airport health departments are largely underfunded and understaffed

The department at Karachi airport has been denied a room in which to interview and examine incoming international travellers and an office at the cargo complex to examine goods due a lack of cooperation from the Civil Aviation Authority

The problem of screening travellers at major airports is only the tip of the iceberg

What about those entering the country through numerous land and water routes? And what happens if a patient is suspected of being infected? A quarantine facility set up in Bhitaiabad, Karachi for Ebola patients lacks the basic protective measures for an effective isolation, defeating the whole purpose of setting up quarantine

Refusing entry to suspected patients, as has happened in one reported incident, is not enough to contain the virus

Even if there are no symptoms of the disease at the point of entry in to the country, people with a history of travelling to infected areas need to be periodically monitored in case they develop symptoms

An infected person can escape detection at an airport screening if they take fever reducing medication a few hours before landing

That is if we have functional screening processes at airports, which currently we do not

This kind of negligence is disturbing given that most experts have predicted that there will probably be a few cases in Asia before the year is out

China is particularly vulnerable due to its vast trading ties with West Africa

A large number of Chinese nationals working in Africa are due to return home for the Lunar New Year, in the middle of February next year

However, China has an experience in coping with contagion, given the SARS outbreak in 2003

Next door, India has an effective tracking and control mechanism used to eliminate polio

In spite of these advantages, these two countries, which are at the highest risk of Ebola in Asia, have been preparing their medical systems for the new threat

Ironically, Pakistan, who cannot even get a handle on polio, is obviously not too bothered – even though an outbreak in the neighbourhood will almost definitely transmit the disease to our soil

And let’s not forget the thousands of Hajis currently streaming back into the country after socialising with pilgrims from across the world

The emergence of sporadic cases of the Ebola virus does not necessarily lead to outbreaks as long as the necessary precautions are put in place

However, the key to Ebola control is to break the chain of contact

In the absence of a vaccine and effective treatment, protective measures are the only way to prevent the spread of this disease

While the news of recovering patients in the US and the recent declaration of Nigeria as officially Ebola-free are heartening, we have to remember that the US has state of the art isolation facilities while Nigeria deployed personnel, technology and management methods used to combat polio to detect Ebola cases, trace contacts and implement quarantines

We can’t even eliminate polio, a disease that not only has a vaccine but is also far less deadly and infectious than Ebola

Forget polio, we can’t even manage dengue, a disease that follows predictable seasonal cycles and doesn’t spread by human contact

Imagine the devastation wrecked by something like the Ebola

Pakistan’s experience of viruses, with its densely populated cities and towns and abysmal medical infrastructure, will probably be similar to that of Liberia and Sierra Leone where the epidemic has reversed years of economic gains

Even the formulation of a vaccine is not a guarantee against an outbreak

Medicines and vaccines are only as good as their availability, as amply demonstrated by our inability to eradicate polio

 In the case of Ebola, prevention must be prioritised

 We urgently need to mobilise our resources to detect and isolate cases because we are hardly equipped to handle a full-fledged outbreak



Date:06-Nov-2014 Reference:View Original Link