Karachi seems to be in the grip of stray dogs. Well, the statistics do say so. According to health authorities, more than 26,000 dog-bite cases have been reported in the metropolis in the current year alone, with 21 precious lives being lost. The situation points towards a growing health and social challenge which is further exacerbated by limited access to timely treatments and preventative measures.
Rabies is a preventable disease but not a curable one. According to experts, once the symptoms set in, “it is too late for treatment”. Therefore, the only way of addressing this problem is either through widespread information campaigns, or by curbing the pervasion of dogs. The rabies crisis is more concerning once compared globally, as many countries have eliminated human rabies deaths through mass vaccination of dogs and ensuring timely access to post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), an antiretroviral drug to prevent infection.
Pakistan’s struggle against rabies highlights a deeply inadequate and inefficient control system, which often involves the culling of dogs through poison – a measure both cruel and ineffective. Although government authorities have not banned culling, they have repeatedly instructed municipal authorities to adopt humane methods instead.
Urban and rural areas alike reveal broader challenges that are tied to rabies prevention. In several districts, hospitals face an acute shortage of anti-rabies vaccines (ARV) and immunoglobulin, and are forced to turn victims away. Simultaneously, myths, misinformation and weak community awareness further complicate the problem, leaving many people dangerously uninformed about urgent first-response practices.
Ending rabies deaths requires more than reactive measures. It demands consistent funding for an adequate supply of vaccines and active community engagement to bridge the currently fatal knowledge gap. Without these, Pakistan risks allowing a preventable disease to continue inflicting avoidable loss of lives.