With a swollen belly, aching feet and her four-year-old daughter in tow, Fahmidah Bibi keeps an eye out for a doctor who is rumoured to be due a visit at the campsite she now calls home, after being forced to flee her village because of flooding.
The camp, in the grounds of a small railway station on the outskirts of Fazilpur in Pakistan's Punjab province, is the only high ground in a landscape of water, and accommodates around 500 people.
They include Fahmidah, 40, who arrived with her five children just over a week ago, along with her husband's relatives.
"I need a doctor or a midwife. What if something happens to my child?" Fahmidah -- nine months pregnant and due any day -- told AFP at the weekend.
More than 33 million people in Pakistan have been affected by the flooding, brought on by record monsoon rains that have also caused at least 1,300 deaths, according to government data.