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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
MSF
treating patients during cholera outbreak
Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF)
September 16, 2008
View article
on the MSF website
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF) is treating people affected by the
recent cholera outbreak in the Zimbabwean town of Chitungwiza. The
first cases were reported at the beginning of September. At the
start, there were between eight and 10 patients admitted per day.
Today the number is under five.
Chitungwiza, a new city
of 1.1 million inhabitants, built as a place to live for people
who could not find space in Harare in the 1980s, has had insufficient
funding for maintenance of its public services. Since late last
year, the majority of the city's inhabitants have repeatedly faced
periods in which they had to do without running water. Apart from
causing a lack of access to safe drinking water this also resulted
in blocked sewage pipes, which eventually burst. Chitungwiza can
be considered as one example for the degradation of basic infrastructure
in Zimbabwe over the last five years.
Over the last three months,
running water was cut to a number of suburbs, forcing people to
dig unprotected wells in order to have water. As people were also
unable to flush their toilets, they had to resort to defecating
in surrounding fields because the city by-laws do not allow alternatives
such as pit latrines to be built.
This mixture of unprotected
wells and burst sewer pipes has created an almost ideal breeding
environment for cholera. The disease is water-borne, thrives in
unsanitary conditions, and is endemic in the rural areas of Zimbabwe
during the rainy season from November to March, but it is very rarely
seen in urban settings and during the dry season. The upcoming rains
are therefore expected to only worsen the situation, as excess water
effectively flushes the standing sewage into unprotected wells.
The first cases of cholera
were reported at the beginning of September in Chitungwiza hospital,
where MSF normally refers some HIV/AIDS patients. The Ministry of
Health has since announced that there have been "nine deaths
in Chitungwiza" attributed to the disease. The vast majority
of patients come from one street in the city, made up of approximately
100 houses, with three or more families living in each household.
This could potentially mean that between 2,000 and 5,000 people
are at risk.
In response, the Ministry
of Health in collaboration with MSF has set up two cholera treatment
centers (CTCs); one is located in Chitungwiza Central Hospital,
with the other located closer to the affected community as a more
decentralized approach is taken. While the number of daily admissions
has dropped from between eight and 10 to under five, an intervention
was initiated to provide access to clean water.
On average, 200 people
are being screened each day. High HIV rates and generally poor hygienic
conditions cause many people to suffer from diarrhea and seek treatment,
which makes case identification difficult. MSF and the city health
authorities are sharing technical expertise to ensure proper diagnosis.
MSF is also engaged in
other activities in this emergency, including sensitizing the affected
community to the crisis through our outreach teams, working to contain
the epidemic and reduce the number of excess infections, ensure
access to potable water and advocating for the long-term needs of
the community. These are all extensive tasks and MSF has therefore
lobbied other actors to engage, with Unicef now trucking water to
the community and other non-governmental organizations distributing
non-food relief items. This has allowed MSF to concentrate more
on the medical aspects of the intervention with environmental health
teams linking in with the authorities to actively find patients
by attending funerals and tracing links to existing cases. MSF disinfection
teams are also instrumental in reducing infection rates by chlorinating
the households of existing patients, including the disinfection
of kitchen utensils, to reduce the risk of family or other household
members becoming infected.
Since the onset of the
outbreak the two CTCs have treated over 90 cases of suspected cholera
in the city. Treatment varies dependent on the severity of cases,
but generally it is simple re-hydration through oral rehydration
salts and ringer lactate that will save the majority of lives.
Access to clean potable
water in sufficient quantities and a solution to the city's sewage
problems now must be found and must be found quickly before the
rains start and the problem grows. It is this hunt for the medium
and long-term solution that must occupy the authorities time between
now and November. MSF is committed to assisting the community in
need and will be involved in identifying solutions with all actors
on the ground, not only to avert a greater public health crisis
in the future.
MSF first started working
in Zimbabwe in 2000 addressing nutritional needs. Soon after, in
response to the HIV/AIDS crisis, MSF started to run HIV-focused
projects. These programs are based in Epworth and Gweru, Bulawayo,
Tsholotsho, Buhera and Beitbridge. MSF programs, which are implemented
within the Zimbabwean health structures, ensure medical care to
more than 40,000 HIV-positive patients in Zimbabwe, out of whom
more than 22,000 are receiving anti-retroviral (ARV) therapy. MSF-teams
are also treating tuberculosis and malnutrition and are addressing
emergency health needs, e.g. outbreaks of cholera in 2006 and 2008
and a diarrhea outbreak in 2007. The most recent outbreak of cholera
MSF reacted to happened in spring 2008 in Mashonaland, northeast
of Harare.
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