Pakistan vaccinates 9mn girls against cervical cancer despite online backlash

Globally, it is the fourth most common. Each year, between 18,000 and 20,000 women in Pakistan die of the disease, according to health authorities.

Karachi: Pakistan has vaccinated about 9 million adolescent girls against the virus that causes cervical cancer, as part of a continuing national campaign that has overcome early setbacks fuelled by sceptics online, the health minister said Friday.

Health Minister Mustafa Kamal said the campaign that began September 15 is aiming to vaccinate 13 million girls aged 9 to 14 against the human papillomavirus, or HPV, which causes most cervical cancers. He said the programme so far achieved 70 per cent of its goal.

The programme has overcome what Kamal said were baseless rumours spread by some parents that the vaccine could cause infertility. He gave the vaccine to his own daughter live on stage at an event in Karachi this week to build confidence.

Memory Khan Seminar

“By the grace of God, administering the vaccine to my daughter publicly had a huge impact,” Kamal told The Associated Press. “From the fifth day of the campaign, refusal rates began dropping and acceptance climbed to 70–80 per cent in some districts.”

However, many parents are still reluctant.

“I have heard that the vaccination is being used to make women infertile and reduce the population of Muslims,” said Ali Sheikh, a mother of two in Karachi, the capital of Sindh province.

She said that “social media is full of such claims,” and that she was advised by relatives not to allow health workers to vaccinate her daughters.

Health worker Shamim Anwar, 52, said the job of administering the vaccines has been exhausting.

“It is very difficult work. Many parents refuse because of rumours and hesitate to let us vaccinate their daughters,” she said.

Germanten Hospital

“Sometimes we even face humiliation, but we tolerate it because we have to complete the vaccination target,” she said, as she went door-to-door for the campaign in Karachi.

Cervical cancer is the third most common cancer among Pakistani women after breast and ovarian cancers. Globally, it is the fourth most common. Each year, between 18,000 and 20,000 women in Pakistan die of the disease, according to health authorities.

Experts promoted the campaign under the slogan “one jab will do the job.” Authorities set up vaccination centres and deployed teams to schools nationwide to reach as many girls as possible.

Kamal acknowledged that during the first days of the drive, refusals outnumbered acceptances, fuelled by false claims that the vaccine campaign is a Western plot to cause infertility.

Officials say the vaccine, offered free of charge, typically causes only minor side effects.

The 13 million girls targeted in the initial campaign were in Punjab and Sindh provinces and in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. The country plans to expand the coverage to additional areas by 2027, hoping to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem by 2030. It became the 149th country to add the HPV vaccine to its immunization schedule.

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