Hospital at centre of child HIV outbreak caught reusing syringes in Pakistan
5 hours ago
- #HIV Outbreak
- #Medical Negligence
- #Pakistan Healthcare
- An undercover investigation at THQ Taunsa Hospital in Punjab, Pakistan, revealed unsafe injection practices, including syringe reuse, months after a child HIV outbreak was first reported.
- 331 children in Taunsa tested positive for HIV between November 2024 and October 2025, with evidence pointing to contaminated needles at the hospital as a primary transmission mode.
- Hospital officials, including the medical superintendent, denied the footage's authenticity or timing, insisting the facility is safe, despite clear evidence of ongoing dangerous practices.
- A joint mission by UNICEF, WHO, and local health departments confirmed similar unsafe conditions in inspections, highlighting broader systemic issues in infection control across Pakistan.
- Systemic pressures, such as high demand for unnecessary injections and supply shortages, contribute to unsafe practices, mirroring previous outbreaks in other Pakistani regions like Ratodero and Karachi.
- Affected families, including children like Asma, face lifelong HIV treatment and social stigma, with the outbreak underscoring critical failures in healthcare safety and training.