Children in Pakistan among millions under threat as vaccine coverage faltering — study

A health worker administers polio drops to a child for vaccination during a door-to-door poliovirus eradication campaign in Lahore on April 21, 2025. (AFAP/File)
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Updated 25 June 2025
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Children in Pakistan among millions under threat as vaccine coverage faltering — study

  • Cases of polio, long eradicated in many areas thanks to vaccination, have been rising in Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • Researchers say setbacks threaten WHO goal of essential vaccines for 90 percent world’s children, adolescents by 2030

PARIS: Efforts to vaccinate children against deadly diseases are faltering across the world due to economic inequality, Covid-era disruptions and misinformation, putting millions of lives at risk, research warned Wednesday.

These trends all increase the threat of future outbreaks of preventable diseases, the researchers said, while sweeping foreign aid cuts threaten previous progress in vaccinating the world’s children.

A new study published in The Lancet journal looked at childhood vaccination rates across 204 countries and territories.

It was not all bad news.

An immunization program by the World Health Organization was estimated to have saved an estimated 154 million lives over the last 50 years.

And vaccination coverage against diseases such as diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, polio and tuberculosis doubled between 1980 and 2023, the international team of researchers found.

However the gains slowed in the 2010s, when measles vaccinations decreased in around half of the countries, with the largest drop in Latin America.

Meanwhile in more than half of all high-income countries there were declines in coverage for at least one vaccine dose.

Then the Covid-19 pandemic struck.

Routine vaccination services were hugely disrupted during lockdowns and other measures, resulting in nearly 13 million extra children who never received any vaccine dose between 2020 to 2023, the study said.

This disparity endured, particularly in poorer countries. In 2023, more than half of the world’s 15.7 million completely unvaccinated children lived in just eight countries, the majority in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the study.

In the European Union, 10 times more measles cases were recorded last year compared to 2023.

In the United States, a measles outbreak surged past 1,000 cases across 30 states last month, which is already more than were recorded in all of 2024.

Cases of polio, long eradicated in many areas thanks to vaccination, have been rising in Pakistan and Afghanistan, while Papua New Guinea is currently enduring a polio outbreak.

“Routine childhood vaccinations are among the most powerful and cost-effective public health interventions available,” said senior study author Jonathan Mosser of the US-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).

“But persistent global inequalities, challenges from the COVID pandemic, and the growth of vaccine misinformation and hesitancy have all contributed to faltering immunization progress,” he said in a statement.

In addition, there are “rising numbers of displaced people and growing disparities due to armed conflict, political volatility, economic uncertainty, climate crises,” added lead study author Emily Haeuser, also from the IHME.

The researchers warned the setbacks could threaten the WHO’s goal of having 90 percent of the world’s children and adolescents receive essential vaccines by 2030.

The WHO also aims to halve the number of children who have received no vaccine doses by 2030 compared to 2019 levels.

Just 18 countries have achieved this so far, according to the study, which was funded by the Gates Foundation and the Gavi vaccine alliance.

The global health community has also been reeling since President Donald Trump’s administration drastically slashed US international aid earlier this year.

“For the first time in decades, the number of kids dying around the world will likely go up this year instead of down because of massive cuts to foreign aid,” Bill Gates said in a separate statement on Tuesday.

“That is a tragedy,” the Microsoft co-founder said, committing $1.6 billion to Gavi, which is holding a fund-raising summit in Brussels on Wednesday.


Pakistan, three European states agree joint strategy to curb illegal migration

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Pakistan, three European states agree joint strategy to curb illegal migration

  • Pakistan, Italy, Spain and Greece agree to expand legal migration pathways
  • European Union to support Pakistan’s enforcement and institutional capacity

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan, Italy, Spain and Greece have agreed to adopt a coordinated strategy to curb illegal migration while expanding legal pathways, an official statement said on Thursday, as Islamabad seeks to consolidate a crackdown it says has already reduced irregular migration to Europe by 47 percent.

The development comes during Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi’s visit to Italy where he attended a four-nation conference in Rome with his counterparts from the three European states focused on tackling human smuggling networks and regulating migration flows.

Pakistan stepped up its enforcement drive in 2023 after hundreds of migrants, including many Pakistanis, drowned in a shipwreck off Pylos in one of the Mediterranean’s deadliest disasters.

Since then, authorities say they have intensified airport screening, arrested more than 1,700 suspected human smugglers and launched technology-driven systems to detect forged travel documents.

“Pakistan, Italy, Spain and Greece agreed to adopt a coordinated strategy to curb illegal immigration at all levels,” the interior ministry said in a statement.

“The three countries agreed with the Pakistani interior minister’s proposal to curb illegal immigration through legal pathways,” it added.

The ministry said all three European states decided to provide full support to Pakistan to enhance its capacity under the European Union framework.

Naqvi also met Greek Migration and Asylum Minister Athanasios Plevris, with both officials agreeing to finalize a Migration Cooperation Agreement and to establish a joint working group to improve coordination.

He also welcomed support from Greece in developing and strengthening the skills of Pakistani police and paramilitary forces in technology-based operations.

The statement said the four countries agreed to further strengthen a joint rapid response mechanism and decided to hold the next quadrilateral meeting later this year.

A decision was also taken to repatriate criminals involved in serious crimes from Europe to Pakistan for legal action, according to the ministry.

Pakistan has said European ministers acknowledged a 47 percent drop in illegal migration in 2025 following its expanded crackdown.

Last December, Pakistan announced plans to roll out an artificial intelligence-based immigration screening system in Islamabad, and in September the Federal Investigation Agency released a list of more than 100 “most wanted” human smugglers while identifying major trafficking hubs.