Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital

Chief Minister Punjab Maryam Nawaz Sharif (right) visits the newly established unit of coablation cancer treatment center at Mayo Hospital in Lahore, Pakistan, on September 18, 2025. (Facebook/@TheMaryamNSharif)
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Updated 20 September 2025
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Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital

  • The Punjab government brought the facility to Pakistan from China where Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz observed advanced treatment method
  • Pakistan this month launched the country’s first Human Papillomavirus vaccination campaign, which is running from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27

ISLAMABAD: The government in Pakistan's Punjab province has opened a coablation cancer treatment center in the eastern city of Lahore, the chief minister announced this week, with provincial authorities labelling it as the first such facility at a public sector institute in Pakistan.

The provincial government brought the facility to Pakistan from China where Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz had observed the advanced treatment method at the Xi Ji Tan & Hygea Medical Technologies.

She had signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Chinese firm to bring the advanced cancer treatment and machinery to Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, during her visit to China in Dec. 2024.

“When I visited China, I was visiting a company there and they showed me a machine. They said that ‘this machine, without surgery, without operation, without anesthesia, without the radiation therapy that is done... this machine treats cancer’,” Nawaz said at a ceremony in Sargodha.

“That tumor, whether it is unfortunately in the lungs or in the kidneys, this machine treats that tumor.”

She inspected the coablation machine installed in the surgical ward of Lahore’s Mayo Hospital and met the center’s doctors, paramedics, and cancer patients undergoing coablation treatment, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported.

Senior Radiologist Dr. Shehzad Kareem Bhatti briefed the CM about working mechanism of the coablation machine, which uses liquid nitrogen to freeze cancer cells at -198°C, followed by heating the affected tissue up to 83°C in a second phase to destroy targeted cancer cells.

“The procedure takes approximately 60 to 120 minutes and most patients are able to walk within a few hours post-operation. The cost of treatment per patient on the coablation machine was around Rs 1.6m,” he was quoted as saying.

The development comes days after Pakistan launched the country’s first Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination campaign, which is running from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27 and aims to protect millions from cervical cancer.

HPV is a very common virus that can cause cancers later in life, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Medical experts recommend protecting children from these cancers through the HPV vaccine.

Health Minister Mustafa Kamal said that over 5,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer in Pakistan each year, adding that approximately 3,500 of them lose their lives to the disease, state media reported. The minister called on parents to ensure their daughters are vaccinated, emphasizing the importance of prevention to protect girls.


IMF warns against policy slippage amid weak recovery as it clears $1.2 billion for Pakistan

Updated 11 December 2025
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IMF warns against policy slippage amid weak recovery as it clears $1.2 billion for Pakistan

  • Pakistan rebuilt reserves, cut its deficit and slowed inflation sharply over the past one year
  • Fund says climate shocks, energy debt, stalled reforms threaten stability despite recent gains

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s economic recovery remains fragile despite a year of painful stabilization measures that helped pull the country back from the brink of default, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned on Thursday, after it approved a fresh $1.2 billion disbursement under its ongoing loan program.

The approval covers the second review of Pakistan’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the first review of its climate-focused Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), bringing total disbursements since last year to about $3.3 billion.

Pakistan entered the IMF program in September 2024 after years of weak revenues, soaring fiscal deficits, import controls, currency depletion and repeated climate shocks left the economy close to external default. A smaller stopgap arrangement earlier that year helped avert immediate default, but the current 37-month program was designed to restore macroeconomic stability through strict monetary tightening, currency adjustments, subsidy rationalization and aggressive revenue measures.

The IMF’s new review shows that Pakistan has delivered significant gains since then. Growth recovered to 3 percent last year after shrinking the year before. Inflation fell from over 23 percent to low single digits before rising again after this year’s floods. The current account posted its first surplus in 14 years, helped by stronger remittances and a sharp reduction in imports. And the government delivered a primary budget surplus of 1.3 percent of GDP, a key program requirement. Foreign exchange reserves, which had dropped dangerously low in 2023, rose from US$9.4 billion to US$14.5 billion by June.

“Pakistan’s reform implementation under the EFF arrangement has helped preserve macroeconomic stability in the face of several recent shocks,” IMF Deputy Managing Director Nigel Clarke said in a statement after the Board meeting.

But he warned that Islamabad must “maintain prudent policies” and accelerate reforms needed for private-sector-led and sustainable growth.

The Fund noted that the 2025 monsoon floods, affecting nearly seven million people, damaging housing, livestock and key crops, and displacing more than four million, have set back the recovery. The IMF now expects GDP growth in FY26 to be slightly lower and forecasts inflation to rise to 8–10 percent in the coming months as food prices adjust.

The review warns Pakistan against relaxing monetary or fiscal discipline prematurely. It urges the State Bank to keep policy “appropriately tight,” allow exchange-rate flexibility and improve communication. Islamabad must also continue raising revenues, broadening the tax base and protecting social spending, the Fund said.

Despite the progress, Pakistan’s structural weaknesses remain severe.

Power-sector circular debt stands at about $5.7 billion, and gas-sector arrears have climbed to $11.3 billion despite tariff adjustments. Reform of state-owned enterprises has slowed, including delays in privatizing loss-making electricity distributors and Pakistan International Airlines. Key governance and anti-corruption reforms have also been pushed back.

The IMF welcomed Pakistan’s expansion of its flagship Benazir Income Support Program, which raises cash transfers for low-income families and expands coverage, saying social protection is essential as climate shocks intensify. But it warned that high public debt, about 72 percent of GDP, thin external buffers and climate exposure leave the country vulnerable if reform momentum weakens.

The Fund said Pakistan’s challenge now is to convert short-term stabilization into sustained recovery after years of economic volatility, with its ability to maintain discipline, rather than the size of external financing alone, determining the durability of its gains.