ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Health Syed Mustafa Kamal has said Pakistan will develop a new nationwide plan to launch an immunisation drive aimed at protecting children against 12 life-threatening diseases.
The minister made the announcement while chairing a meeting of the federal directorate of immunisation on Monday to review progress and challenges of the country’s immunisation programme.
Mr Kamal highlighted urgent need for coordinated measures to increase immunisation coverage, ensuring all children are protected against vaccine-preventable diseases. He said an awareness campaign would be launched so that parents understand the critical importance of timely vaccination.
Parents must not become enemies of their own children by ignoring vaccination, the minister said, adding that they must take their children to the nearest health centre for routine immunisation.
Underscoring the government’s commitment, he said prevention was the primary focus. “Prevention is better than cure,” he remarked. “We must stop children from falling ill in the first place,” he said, adding that protecting children from deadly diseases was not only a public health priority but also a “religious and moral responsibility of every parent”.
During the meeting, EPI Director General Dr Soofia Yunus presented a briefing on the current challenges and outlined the strategic way forward.
The WHO reaffirmed its support for Pakistan on World Hepatitis Day, also observed on Monday, as the country faces the world’s highest hepatitis C burden, with 10 million of the global 60 million cases.
“We will continue to fully support Pakistan in its journey to combat hepatitis and reinforce prevention, detection, and treatment, ensuring that we protect the most vulnerable populations to leave no one behind,” said Dr Dapeng Luo, the WHO representative in Pakistan.
In Pakistan, common modes of transmission include unsafe blood transfusions, reused needles and syringes, and unhygienic practices in surgical, dental, tattooing and barber shop settings.
Globally, chronic viral hepatitis causes 1.3 million deaths every year, or about 3,500 deaths every day, mostly from liver cancer and cirrhosis.
Published in Dawn, July 29th, 2025