Lahore:
In the intensive-care ward of Lahore's Mayo hospital, pale, spotty children cry in the intense heat of the Pakistani summer - victims of a devastating measles outbreak.
Punjab, Pakistan's most populous province of which Lahore is the capital, has borne the brunt of the epidemic. It has 18,000 of the 25,000 cases reported around the country by provincial health authorities and more than 150, all children, of the 495 deaths.
The province is the country's richest and most developed, but health experts say ineffective vaccination programmes and poor monitoring of the disease have led to the contagious disease running rampant.
"Initially people were unaware about this epidemic, so they tried to treat the disease at home and using local street doctors," doctor Iftikhar Mirza, a spokesman for Mayo, Lahore's main public hospital, told AFP.
"They were even unaware about the vaccination. So, when they came to us, the children were in a critical condition and many had already died."
Asad Abbas, a labourer, tried to treat the disease, spread by droplets from the nose or mouth of infected people, with traditional methods and sought proper medical treatment only just in time.
"The red spots appeared on my six-year-old grandson's body some days back. We took it lightly and got him treated from a homeopathic practitioner," he said.
"Then he started vomiting and his energy vanished. When we brought him here, he was about to die. But after treatment over here, he is okay now."
Doctor Muhammad Younas, an official from the Directorate General of Health in Punjab, told AFP the province had seen 17,985 measles cases this year, with 158 deaths.
"This is the worst situation in five years and we can confidently say that the number of these cases is much higher than during the previous five years," he said.
Last year there were 310 measles deaths in Pakistan, according to the World Health Organization, described in January by a health ministry official as "a record high".
The WHO uses a more conservative count of cases and deaths, but even by its measure 2013 is on track to be far worse than 2012. Since the start of the year the WHO has recorded 12,951 measles cases and 290 deaths across Pakistan -- compared to 14,984 cases and 310 deaths in the whole of last year.
The WHO says three consecutive years of severe flooding, which put Pakistan's health system under severe strain, have helped measles cases rocket from 4,321 in 2010 to the current alarming figure.
Pakistan has a network of vaccination centres for mothers and newborns, and issues vaccination cards for children who are born in hospitals or seen by doctors after birth.
But many women - like Asad Abbas's daughter - give birth at home and do not see a doctor either during or after pregnancy.
Efforts to eradicate polio in Pakistan have been hampered by longstanding conspiracy rumours that the vaccination droplets contain a sterilising chemical as part of a Western plot to reduce the Muslim population.
There has also been opposition from militant Islamists who see the vaccination drives as cover for espionage, and numerous health workers on polio campaigns have been gunned down in recent months.
The United States fuelled the conspiracy theories by using a hepatitis vaccination drive in the Pakistani city of Abbotabad as cover for gathering intelligence on the whereabouts of Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden.
Measles programmes have not been affected by these problems, but even where families are aware of the dangers of the disease, efforts to get children immunised have struggled with youngsters not always showing up for jabs.
The measles vaccine is cheap - less than a dollar per child according to the WHO - but two shots are recommended to prevent outbreaks, as around 15 percent of children do not achieve immunity with a single dose.
An official with the UN Children's Fund in Punjab said missed vaccinations had built up over the years to create the current outbreak.
"Some children could not be immunised even after vaccination and many others have issues of malnutrition, so all these cases accumulate after five years and the disease turn out as an epidemic. This is what has happened this time," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Jaffer Ilyas, a spokesman for the Directorate General of Health in Punjab, said the province had vaccinated 2.6 million children in response to the epidemic.
Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has declared a "war against measles" and the province hopes to have the outbreak under control within weeks, Ilyas said.
Punjab, Pakistan's most populous province of which Lahore is the capital, has borne the brunt of the epidemic. It has 18,000 of the 25,000 cases reported around the country by provincial health authorities and more than 150, all children, of the 495 deaths.
The province is the country's richest and most developed, but health experts say ineffective vaccination programmes and poor monitoring of the disease have led to the contagious disease running rampant.
"Initially people were unaware about this epidemic, so they tried to treat the disease at home and using local street doctors," doctor Iftikhar Mirza, a spokesman for Mayo, Lahore's main public hospital, told AFP.
"They were even unaware about the vaccination. So, when they came to us, the children were in a critical condition and many had already died."
Asad Abbas, a labourer, tried to treat the disease, spread by droplets from the nose or mouth of infected people, with traditional methods and sought proper medical treatment only just in time.
"The red spots appeared on my six-year-old grandson's body some days back. We took it lightly and got him treated from a homeopathic practitioner," he said.
"Then he started vomiting and his energy vanished. When we brought him here, he was about to die. But after treatment over here, he is okay now."
Doctor Muhammad Younas, an official from the Directorate General of Health in Punjab, told AFP the province had seen 17,985 measles cases this year, with 158 deaths.
"This is the worst situation in five years and we can confidently say that the number of these cases is much higher than during the previous five years," he said.
Last year there were 310 measles deaths in Pakistan, according to the World Health Organization, described in January by a health ministry official as "a record high".
The WHO uses a more conservative count of cases and deaths, but even by its measure 2013 is on track to be far worse than 2012. Since the start of the year the WHO has recorded 12,951 measles cases and 290 deaths across Pakistan -- compared to 14,984 cases and 310 deaths in the whole of last year.
The WHO says three consecutive years of severe flooding, which put Pakistan's health system under severe strain, have helped measles cases rocket from 4,321 in 2010 to the current alarming figure.
Pakistan has a network of vaccination centres for mothers and newborns, and issues vaccination cards for children who are born in hospitals or seen by doctors after birth.
But many women - like Asad Abbas's daughter - give birth at home and do not see a doctor either during or after pregnancy.
Efforts to eradicate polio in Pakistan have been hampered by longstanding conspiracy rumours that the vaccination droplets contain a sterilising chemical as part of a Western plot to reduce the Muslim population.
There has also been opposition from militant Islamists who see the vaccination drives as cover for espionage, and numerous health workers on polio campaigns have been gunned down in recent months.
The United States fuelled the conspiracy theories by using a hepatitis vaccination drive in the Pakistani city of Abbotabad as cover for gathering intelligence on the whereabouts of Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden.
Measles programmes have not been affected by these problems, but even where families are aware of the dangers of the disease, efforts to get children immunised have struggled with youngsters not always showing up for jabs.
The measles vaccine is cheap - less than a dollar per child according to the WHO - but two shots are recommended to prevent outbreaks, as around 15 percent of children do not achieve immunity with a single dose.
An official with the UN Children's Fund in Punjab said missed vaccinations had built up over the years to create the current outbreak.
"Some children could not be immunised even after vaccination and many others have issues of malnutrition, so all these cases accumulate after five years and the disease turn out as an epidemic. This is what has happened this time," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Jaffer Ilyas, a spokesman for the Directorate General of Health in Punjab, said the province had vaccinated 2.6 million children in response to the epidemic.
Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has declared a "war against measles" and the province hopes to have the outbreak under control within weeks, Ilyas said.
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world