The HEALTH : Jan/Feb 2020 | Page 11

JAN/FEB, 2020 | The HEALTH ISSUE: POLIO OUTBREAK 11 A profi le on Polio Name: Poliomyelitis Status: infectious disease caused by the poliovirus DOB: circa 1789; age 200+ years old last location in malaysia: tuaran, sabah, malaysia Origin: said to have existed over 3000 years ago from mummies and ancient egyptian art. first identifi ed as a virus in 1908 by the austrian immunologist Karl landsteiner. lives in an infected person’s throat and intestines. Likes: direct touch, causing paralysis; especially the legs. tropical areas. exposed food & water sources. Wet fi elds. faeces. Dislikes: vaccination. cleanliness – proper hand sanitisation. clean toilets with proper piping system. Symptoms: • Sore throat • Fever • Tiredness • Nausea • Stomach pain up to 95 per cent of polio cases are asymptomatic. only a small number of people may experience mentioned symptoms. one in 200 infections leads to irreversible paralysis (usually of the legs). Note: The virus enter the body through mouth. Happens when the mouth comes in contact with the faeces or saliva of an infected person via the person’s hands. It can also be transmitted when a fl y carrying faecal residues come in contact with food. When poliovirus encounters the nerve cells, the particle attaches itself to the protruding receptors in the protein structure – and infection begins. The virus hijacks the cell’s assembly process and duplicates itself in hours – killing the cell and then spread to infect other cells. Long term sequelae – lower-limb deformities and degenerative joint disease. I will always remember the words my mother said to me about having something others don’t. I worked hard to be where I am today, I have seen the world through my travels, and I have been teaching people how to become good leaders for a long time now.” — Pak Sheikh PICTURE TAKEN FROM HTTPS://AMHISTORY.SI.EDU/POLIO/VIRUSVACCINE/HOW.HTM One day, the boy cried once he reached home as he always does. however on this day, his crying was a bit more intense, and it went on a little too long. her mother, comforting him, asked why he was crying a lot more than normal. Th ey boy said: “Today, the whole class actually made fun of me. All of them!” he cried. “And how is this diff erent than the times you were being teased?” asked his mother. “Because normally it was only these fi ve boys that made fun of me. But this time, the whole class did it!” he cried louder. It was at this time the boy’s life changed. Th e next few words that came out of his mother’s mouth made the boy to what he is today. his mother told him to sit upright, wiped the tears from his cheeks, and asked him a question. “Omar, what is it that makes people make fun of you? What is wrong with you? Th e boy was confused, but he answered nonetheless. “It’s my leg mom! My leg is not normal, so they make fun of me!” her mother then asked. “Okay, but what do you have, that no one else have?” he was confused again, this time not know- ing exactly what to answer. “You have this!” she pointed at his temple. “You have the smarts, the mind that others don’t,” she continued. “My mind?” the boy asked his mother this time. “Yes. And that mind of yours will take you further than any of the people living in this town.” Th e boy was stunned. his mother reminded him of the academic accolades he had received over the years he was in school, despite the never-ending teasing from his peers. “Omar, just remember this,” his mother said to him. “You can’t walk like your peers, but you are the smartest boy in your school. Your peers can walk without a problem, but they can never beat you here,” she again pointed at his temple. Th ose words cut into him like warm knife through butter. It provided him with a shield, a shield that from here on out, will never shatter by the words of people. he looked forward to going to school the very next day. The day he walked through them next day came, the boy was ready. he walked along the road to his school like he always does. Th is time though, he walked high. Maybe it was luck, or maybe it was fate, but the boy’s face lit up when he saw the lorry driving down the road towards him. Th e lorry driver, now a bit older, still stopped to wait for the handicapped boy to abuse. he was ready to start calling him names, and will try to get his spit on the boy this time. But when the boy came close to where he parked the lorry on the side of the road. Th ey boy didn’t froze in terror like how he used to. he kept on going, never once glanced at him. he rudely called the boy names, but he didn’t even slow down his pace. Th e boy passed the evil man he was so scared of before, just like that. Th en came the part where the boy must go through the school’s front gates, where the fi ve boys who made fun of him awaited. he reached the front gates, and there they were. Th e boys started to limp, imitating the way he walked while calling him ‘elephant feet with deer calve’ and all that. he stopped to look at them as they were teasing and making fun of him. her mother’s words shielding him from the pain. And then the boy said: “Oh, poor you! You all can’t even walk properly now! I pity you!” he said. In that instance, the boy knew that nothing could hurt him now. And he walked away from his limping peers and continued with life. Th ey tried again to tease the boy, they boy defl ected and continued to strut away every time. After a week of failed attempts. Th e fi ve boys gave up trying to make fun of the boy. Soaring high his mother’s words still guarded him as he grew older and wiser, the boy graduated top of his class and made it out of the small town he was in when he went to further his studies. Th ey boy now has become a man, a man with nothing but fulfi lment in his life. Th at same boy who is living with polio and was teased by his peers became a professor, and have gone further than anyone had been from his childhood town in Kelantan, even with that limp. Th at boy is Pak Sheikh. he had spent the last 43 years in teaching and research at University Putra Malaysia (UPM). he even has his own consulting company, teaching corporate execu- tives leadership programmes. “I will always remember the words my mother said to me about having something others don’t. I worked hard to be where I am today, I have seen the world through my travels, and I have been teaching people how to become good leaders for a long time now.” Pak Sheikh leads a fulfi lled life now. he has fi ve children and 14 grandchildren. he enjoys the company to whom he can tell his stories to, and we were lucky to have heard them. — Th e Health