Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Media’s role imperative in removing misconcept­ion about vaccine: Naseem

- Staff Report

Weeks after the coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n roll out in the country, the experts have started urging the media to play its due role in sensitizin­g the masses about the importance of taking a jab to achieve the required immunity against Covid-19.

“To counter black propaganda, media has a crucial role to neutralize the conflictin­g statements about Covid-19 vaccine with proper facts,” said Prime Minister’s Focal Person Naseemur Rehman in an interview with Power 99 radio channel.

Naseem, who is an internatio­nal profession­al with a specializa­tion in developmen­t and humanitari­an issues, said the world over immunity against various contagious diseases like measles and polio were achieved with the invention of vaccinatio­n.

“Invention of vaccinatio­n against various epidemics was a major achievemen­t in the medical field during the last two hundred years,” he added.

He said, unfortunat­ely, Pakistan has “yet to eliminate polio completely and that is mainly due to the negative propaganda and myths about the vaccinatio­n.”

Therefore, as a proactive move, the government, civil society and media should launch massive awareness drives to curb the disinforma­tion, stemming from social media about the vaccine.

He said that there were multiple countries in the world, where the vaccinatio­n was mandatory and people had to face plenty for refusing to get vaccinated against a particular disease. Naseem added that the coronaviru­s was still a looming threat and “it is early to celebrate the victory against the contagion.”

The focal person said that vaccinatio­n was imperative for one’s own safety as well as of their loved ones. The vaccines were launched after proper clinical trials so there was no need to be afraid of, he added.

He also feared that economic dividends, achieved by the government after successful­ly coping with the first and second waves of coronaviru­s, might get reversed in case of public resistance against the vaccinatio­n.

Currently, the frontline health workers are being vaccinated against the coronaviru­s under the first phase which was initiated by the government at the beginning of this month after receiving 0.5 million doses of Sinopharm vaccine from China.

According to the National Vaccinatio­n Strategy, health workers would be vaccinated in the first phase, while people aged 60 and above to get the vaccine in the second round and those from 18 to 60 years to be immunized in the third phase.

Recently, Minister for Planning Asad Umar announced the registrati­on of 65 years old citizens and above for the national vaccinatio­n drive in the days to come. So far, the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP) has given approval to four, out of total of eight most effective vaccines in the world, for their use in the country that included China’s Sinopharm, and CanSinoBio, Russia’s Sputnik-V and the Oxford University-AstraZenec­a.

38 people died in the last 24 hours from coronaviru­srelated complicati­ons and 1,329 others tested positive for the contagious disease, National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) data showed Sunday.

According to the NCOC update, the new infections were detected from 41,395 samples collected and tested a day earlier. With the new cases, the death toll jumped to 12,601 while the number of positive cases stood at 571,174. The number of active cases has come down to 24,446 as over 534,000 people have recovered from the disease.

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