Lodi News-Sentinel

Hundreds of Pakistan kids infected with HIV

- By Shashank Bengali and Aoun Sahi

ISLAMABAD — In February, a handful of parents in southern Pakistan’s Larkana district brought their children to physician Imran Arbani’s clinic with similar symptoms, including pneumonia and uncontroll­able fever. Arbani eventually asked a father to have his 16-month-old daughter tested for HIV.

“He got angry with me,” Arbani recalled. “He knew HIV was often spread through unsafe sex. He was an educated person but it took me a good two or three hours to convince him” to get his daughter checked.

The test came back positive. Six weeks later, Arbani had confirmed 20 HIV cases among children. Now more than 750 new infections have been reported in Larkana, including 615 children, an outbreak that World Health Organizati­on officials describe as unpreceden­ted among young people.

Pakistani officials believe the virus was transmitte­d through the use of dirty needles at health clinics, a common problem in one of the least developed corners of Pakistan. Sixteen children and two women have died because of infections, according to local doctors. Health teams backed by the WHO have swept in to conduct thousands of emergency screenings.

Pakistan’s health system is one of the world’s poorest, gripped by chronic shortages of qualified medical profession­als and equipment, as well as social taboos that stand in the way of efforts to vaccinate children against basic diseases like polio — which remains endemic here and in only two other countries, Afghanista­n and Nigeria.

Before the outbreak, scarcely more than 1,000 children were living with HIV in all of Pakistan, according to the WHO. The virus, which can lead to AIDS, attacks the immune system and leaves the body unable to stave off infections.

“The results so far are shocking,” said Sikandar Memon, head of the AIDS control program in Sindh province, which includes Larkana. “Unfortunat­ely, lax medical practices in the area are common.”

Authoritie­s arrested a local government doctor, Muzaffar Ghangro, one of the only pediatrici­ans in the town of Ratodero, who reportedly treated many of the children for illness before they tested positive for the virus. While in custody, Ghangro also was found to be carrying HIV, but police said they found no evidence that he had injected patients deliberate­ly.

He remains in custody, charged with negligence after authoritie­s interviewe­d parents of 125 of his patients who said he had reused syringes that had not been properly sanitized.

Through his lawyer, Azhar Solangi, Ghangro denied the charges, saying that many of those who had contracted the virus had not been his patients. Solangi said Ghangro was being “made a scapegoat” for the HIV problem in Larkana, where a previous outbreak in 2016 was linked to the area’s transgende­r sex workers.

Arbani, credited with identifyin­g the outbreak, said he has treated 100 HIV cases since February, the vast majority of them children. In a phone interview, Arbani said that in most cases the mothers were not carrying the virus and the children had not undergone blood transfusio­ns — two of the main ways the virus is transmitte­d apart from sexual activity.

The epicenter of the outbreak is Ratodero and its surroundin­g villages, where many children suffer from diarrhea and other illnesses spread through poor hygiene and a lack of clean drinking water, and illiterate families sometimes seek medical treatment from unscrupulo­us practition­ers.

“I can’t understand what happened to my son,” said Nisar Ahmad, the father of 18month-old Saifullah, who tested positive for HIV in April after visiting Ghangro’s clinic.

Speaking by phone from the village of Allah Dino Seelro, Ahmad, a laborer, said his son and many other young children went to Ghangro’s office routinely to seek treatment for diarrhea. In a village of fewer than 1,500 people, 21 people were found to have the virus — including 17 children.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES BY RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP ?? A Pakistani paramedic takes a blood sample from a baby for a HIV test at a state-run hospital in Rato Dero in the district of Larkana of the southern Sindh province on May 9.
GETTY IMAGES BY RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP A Pakistani paramedic takes a blood sample from a baby for a HIV test at a state-run hospital in Rato Dero in the district of Larkana of the southern Sindh province on May 9.
 ??  ?? A Pakistani local pediatrici­an alleged to have been responsibl­e for the HIV outbreak, Dr. Muzaffar Ghangro, is seen behind the bars at a local police station in Rato Dero on May 9.
A Pakistani local pediatrici­an alleged to have been responsibl­e for the HIV outbreak, Dr. Muzaffar Ghangro, is seen behind the bars at a local police station in Rato Dero on May 9.

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