Pakistan's 2026 Polio Drive Misses 1M Kids, Faces 53K Refusals

Pakistan's first polio campaign of 2026 vaccinated over 44.3 million children but failed to reach approximately 0.95 million others. A significant 0.67 million of those missed were not present at home during vaccination visits. The campaign faced 53,000 refusals, with over half occurring in Karachi, and was postponed in several Balochistan districts due to security threats. Pakistan remains one of only two countries, alongside Afghanistan, where wild poliovirus is still endemic.

Key Points: Pakistan Polio Campaign Misses 1M Children, 53K Refusals

  • 0.95 million children missed vaccination
  • 53,000 refusals, 58% from Karachi
  • Security issues postponed campaigns in Balochistan
  • Pakistan and Afghanistan remain polio-endemic
3 min read

Pakistan: Around million children missed, 53,000 refusals reported during first polio campaign in 2026

Pakistan's 2026 polio vaccination campaign missed nearly a million children, with 53,000 refusals reported, highlighting security and access challenges.

"233,000 children were reported as leftovers due to security constraints, community boycotts, and snow-bound areas - Official"

Islamabad, Feb 9

Around a million children were not vaccinated and 53,000 refusals were reported during the first polio campaign conducted in Pakistan in 2026, the local media reported on Monday. During the campaign, the largest share of refusals - 58 per cent - were reported in Pakistan's Karachi.

Polio drops were administered to over 44.3 million children in Pakistan. The data has indicated that the polio campaign achieved household coverage of 98 per cent, with only two per cent children missed, Pakistan's leading daily Dawn reported. However, the number of children who did not receive polio drops is still huge considering Pakistan's population.

Overall, 0.95 million children were reported as missed during the polio campaign launched in Pakistan in 2026. Among those, a large proportion of children (0.67 million) did not receive polio vaccination as they were not present at home. During the campaign, polio drops were administered to 2.5 million guest children, likely covering a substantial share of children who were not present at home at the time of vaccination.

"233,000 children were reported as leftovers due to security constraints, community boycotts, and snow-bound areas," said an official. He mentioned that the total leftovers included 184,000 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and around 50,000 children remained unreachable in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK) and Pakistan-occupied Gilgit Baltistan (PoGB) due to snow-bound regions and non-conduct of campaigns.

The official stated that the polio eradication campaign was postponed in Mastung, Gwadar, Chagai, and Awaran areas of Balochistan due to security reasons, Dawn reported. "0.14pc of the total targetted children were reported as refusals, with 31,000 refusals from Karachi, forming the largest share."

According to the statement, polio drops were administered to more than 22.9 million children in Punjab, over 10.5 million children in Sindh, more than 7.13 children in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and over 2.3 million children in Balochistan.

During the polio campaign, more than 455,000 children were vaccinated in Islamabad, approximately 261,000 children were vaccinated in PoGB and more than 673,000 children were vaccinated in PoJK.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where Wild Poliovirus remains an endemic. Polio workers in Pakistan have been frequently targetted in attacks, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan.

In October, a police constable, who was deployed for the security of polio vaccination team, was shot dead after unidentified assailants opened fire in the Kaahi area of Nizampur in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Police identified the constable as Maqsood (35), a resident of Kheshgi.

Police spokesperson said that the incident happened when female health workers were administering polio drops to children in a house, another leading Pakistani daily The Express Tribune reported. The attackers fled from the spot after the incident.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The high number of refusals in Karachi is worrying. Misinformation about vaccines is a global problem, and it seems to be hitting hard there. As a mother, I can't imagine refusing a life-saving drop for my child. Health education is as important as the vaccination drive itself.
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Rohit P
While the article focuses on Pakistan, it's a reminder for us in India too. Polio doesn't respect borders. Until it's eradicated everywhere, there's always a risk. Our health workers did an incredible job to make India polio-free. Hats off to them. 🙏
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Sarah B
The data mentioning "Pakistan-occupied" regions is a political framing. Setting that aside, the core issue is children's health. 53,000 refusals is a significant number driven by fear or distrust. Community engagement is key to turning those numbers around.
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Vikram M
The article says 98% coverage, which sounds good on paper. But in a country with such a large population, that 2% translates to nearly a million kids. That's the entire population of a major Indian city! The scale is mind-boggling. The security constraints for workers are truly sad.
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Michael C
As someone who has worked in global health, these campaigns are incredibly complex. The fact that they vaccinated 44 million children is a massive logistical achievement. The challenges of security, geography, and misinformation are immense. Eradication is always the last mile that's the hardest.

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