Polio True Stories

The strategy here involves unveiling personal experiences using television and other information and communication technologies (ICTs), while in the process endorsing key messages, such as the importance of complete routine immunisation, the importance of every child every time, and the important role of religious leaders. By bringing home to viewers exactly what living with polio means, organisers hope to emphasise the fact that polio is not a thing of the past, and that children today are still being crippled - with their own and their families' lives impacted in the long term. Interviews for this series included some of the most recent polio cases as well as interviews with elder polio victims.
Broadcast on national and regional TV channels during primetime slots (just before and after the news on various channels and between key programming), the episodes have also been adapted for the print media. Copies have been shared with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, so that other endemic countries may produce a similar series in their own context(s). Also, the internet is being used as a tool to bring these stories to a broader audience. For example, by clicking here, one may read the story of one child who was "missed", despite the existence of a toll-free telephone number designed to encourage parents to communicate with officials if they had difficulty obtaining the vaccine.
Children, Immunisation & Vaccines, Health.
Pakistan is one of four remaining polio-endemic countries, along with Nigeria, India, and Afghanistan.
Sharpcut Films, Government of Pakistan, UNICEF, and WHO.
UNICEF Pakistan website; and "True Stories of Polio Victims in Pakistan: Video Testimonials" (no longer online), July 24 2007, Global Polio Eradication Initiative website. Image credit: YouTube
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