Pakistan said on Sunday over 600 people, most of them children,
had tested HIV positive in a city in the southern Sindh province.
Concern
grew after hundreds of people were allegedly infected by a doctor using
a contaminated syringe in Rato Dero city and surrounding villages of
Larkana district.
"Some 681 people,
of which 537 were children from two to 12 years of age, had been tested
positive for HIV until yesterday in Rato Dero," special health advisor
Zafar Mirza told a press conference in Islamabad.
TREATMENT
He
said 21,375 people had been screened in Rato Dero, adding that the
increase in the number of patients testing positive for HIV was "a
matter of grave concern" for the government.
One cause being investigated by Pakistani authorities is the use of "unsafe syringes" on patients.
Mirza said: "Initial investigations reveal
that used syringes are being re-packed, which may not only grow
significantly the number of HIV cases but also other diseases."
The federal government is providing 50,000 HIV screening kits to Sindh.
Provincial
health officials have also noted that patients are at particular risk
of contracting diseases or viruses at these clinics, where injections
are often pushed as a primary treatment option.
"The
government will get to the bottom of the outbreak and fully assist the
provincial government to provide treatment to all patients," Mirza said,
adding that a team of experts from the World Health Organization was
also scheduled to arrive soon to assist Pakistani authorities in
ascertaining the cause of the HIV virus in the area.
"Prime
Minister Imran Khan is going to unveil drastic measures to prevent the
disease once we ascertain the cause of the spread of disease," he said.
FEAR
Parents
in the area fear their children's futures have been irreparably harmed
after contracting HIV, especially in a country whose masses of rural
poor have little understanding of the disease or access to treatment.
Nisar Ahmed, the father of one of the affected baby girls aged just one, told AFP: "We are told to go to Larkana for medicine. I curse the doctor who has spread this disease to every child.
"Four of the children of my village have already been diagnosed HIV positive."
Pakistan
was long considered a low prevalence country for HIV, but the disease
is expanding at an alarming rate, particularly among intravenous drug
users and sex workers.
With about
20,000 new HIV infections reported in 2017 alone, Pakistan currently has
the second fastest growing HIV rates across Asia, according to the UN.
"According
to some government reports, around 600,000 quack doctors are operating
across the country and around 270,000 are practising in the province of
Sindh," according to UNAids.
Pakistan's
surging population also suffers the additional burden of having
insufficient access to quality healthcare following decades of
under-investment by the state, leaving impoverished, rural communities
especially vulnerable to unqualified medical practitioners.
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