Punjab records nearly 300 pneumonia fatalities in January

Published February 2, 2024
A doctor treats a child suffering from pneumonia, at the ICU ward of the Children’s Hospital in Lahore on January 31. — AFP
A doctor treats a child suffering from pneumonia, at the ICU ward of the Children’s Hospital in Lahore on January 31. — AFP
Parents wait with their child suffering from pneumonia, at the Children’s Hospital in Lahore on January 31. — AFP
Parents wait with their child suffering from pneumonia, at the Children’s Hospital in Lahore on January 31. — AFP

Around 300 fatalities and over 18,000 pneumonia cases were registered in eastern Punjab for January.

Around half of childhood pneumonia deaths are associated with air pollution, according to Unicef.

The provincial government extended school holidays, clipped classroom hours and mandated face masks in a bid to shield children.

Children’s Hospital Lahore has nevertheless admitted hundreds of cases every day.

In a paediatric ward, a chorus of infant coughs and straining lungs is the toll of a frigid winter, compounded by choking smog and lagging vaccination rates.

“Please pray for him,” the mother of four-month-old pneumonia patient Ibrahim begs a nurse, delicately arranging a blanket around ventilator tubes piping air in and out of his heaving chest.

The megacity is blanched every winter by smog levels rated among the worst in the world.

Rain usually brings respite, soaking up pollution particles, but the country has endured an unusually dry and cold winter — making children vulnerable to respiratory infection, doctors said.

Outside the main building of the 1,300-bed facility, Rashid Liaquat sits with his three-year-old son Mohammad Ali, who developed a high fever five days ago.

When 31-year-old Liaquat heard his son fighting for breath in his sleep he rushed him to the clinic where he was diagnosed with pneumonia.

“The wheezing sound really scared me. I did not know it was pneumonia but I was sure something was really wrong,” Liaquat said.

The first question doctors asked him was whether Ali was fully immunised, which he was, spurring his road to recovery. But many are not, according to senior doctor Junaid Rashid.

“We feel uncomfortable when a child comes to us with the disease and he has not been vaccinated,” the 55-year-old medic said.

Free jabs are offered for respiratory disease at six, 10 and 14 weeks of age.

But the federal government has long grappled with the challenge of increasing vaccine uptake when misinformation is rife and some fringe clerics declare it un-Islamic.

Premature births and stunting caused by malnutrition are also prevalent, weakening children who are then easy prey for pneumonia.

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