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Pulse Polio Awareness Rally Held in Varanasi Ahead of Immunisation Drive

By Harsh Mehra7 min read
Pulse Polio awareness rally in Varanasi

Varanasi, June 29, 2026: The district health department organised a Pulse Polio awareness rally in Varanasi ahead of the latest immunisation campaign, urging parents to ensure that eligible children below five years of age receive oral polio drops.

The rally was flagged off by Chief Medical Officer Mukesh Kumar, according to reports. Similar awareness activities were also held from primary health centres, community health centres and urban PHCs across the district.

ASHA workers, ANMs, health workers, nursing students and department officials participated in the outreach effort. The campaign focused on public awareness rather than clinical advice, asking families to follow the official vaccination schedule and cooperate with health teams.

Health Department Holds Awareness Rally

The rally was organised to remind families about the Pulse Polio campaign and the importance of ensuring that no eligible child is left out. Participants carried campaign material and appealed to parents to take children to designated vaccination booths.

Public health campaigns such as this are especially important in dense urban and rural districts where families may miss booth days because of travel, work, lack of awareness or other local constraints. The health department's effort was aimed at making the campaign visible at the community level.

Booth Day and Door-to-Door Vaccination

Reports said Booth Day was scheduled for Sunday for children aged 0 to 5 years. Health department teams were then expected to begin door-to-door visits from June 29 to cover children who could not attend booths.

This two-step approach is commonly used in polio campaigns: first, booths are set up for mass coverage; then field teams follow up in households to identify children who may have been missed.

Appeal to Parents

CMO Mukesh Kumar reportedly stressed that active participation by parents is essential for the success of the campaign. The appeal was simple: bring children to the nearest vaccination point and cooperate when health workers visit homes.

Dalimss News is not offering medical advice in this report. Parents should follow instructions issued by the district health department and consult qualified health officials if they have questions about vaccination eligibility or timing.

Why Polio Vigilance Still Matters

India has been recognised as polio-free, but health authorities continue vaccination and surveillance efforts to protect that achievement. The WHO South-East Asia Region was certified polio-free in 2014, and public health agencies continue to stress high immunity and strong monitoring.

For health workers in Varanasi, the current campaign is part of that continued vigilance. The local rally showed how community mobilisation remains central to keeping children protected and sustaining public confidence in immunisation drives.

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