ISLAMABAD: A pneumonia surge in Pakistan’s Punjab province killed 12 children in the last 24 hours, state-run APP news agency reported on Tuesday, in a deadly winter season with regular gas outages and many Pakistanis unable to afford adequate heating.
Pakistan’s consumer price index (CPI) for December rose 29.7 percent from a year before, data released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics on Jan. 1 showed, after the country of 241 million people experienced its highest ever inflation in 2023, with its currency dipping to historic lows until a $3 billion IMF bailout averted an imminent sovereign default in July.
Ahead of the winter season, Pakistan announced a sharp increase in the price of natural gas for most households and industry in October, leaving millions of Pakistanis with the choice between food and fuel as an economic crisis grips the country. Long hours of gas outages or loadshedding are also common.
“Pneumonia in the Punjab region continued to claim lives as 12 more children died of the disease during the past 24 hours,” APP reported, quoting the Punjab health ministry and adding that the children were aged between two months and 12 years.
“There have been 491 cases of pneumonia was reported in Punjab during the past 24 hours, whereas in [eastern city of Lahore, 230 children have been confirmed with the disease during the same period,” APP said.
“The total number of children who have suffered from the disease in Punjab this year has reached 194, while in Lahore, 45 children have been affected by the disease so far this year.”
Doctors and aid workers say thousands of children are being admitted to hospitals across the country with pneumonia and other respiratory diseases caused by the cold and malnutrition. Pneumonia causes inflammation in the air sacs of the lungs with symptoms including phlegm or pus, fever, chills, and breathing difficulties, often with fatal consequences.
Thousands of children in Pakistan are also suffering from pollution-related health problems, with health officials estimating an at least 50 percent rise in pediatric patients due to respiratory issues exacerbated by poor air quality since last month.
Lahore, known historically as a city of gardens, is now choking with toxic smog that placed it as the world’s worst for air quality last year.