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Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Cholera
outbreak threatens to become endemic
IRIN
News
October 20, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81009
A cholera outbreak
that has bridged Zimbabwe's dry season is proving difficult to contain
and has spread from the cities to rural areas.
There are fears that
the onset of the rainy season could make the waterborne disease
endemic if the authorities fail to address the water and sanitation
crisis plaguing the county.
Cholera is an intestinal
infection causing acute diarrhoea and vomiting and, if left untreated,
can cause death from dehydration within 24 hours. It is easily treatable
with rehydration salts.
An anthrax outbreak has
also been reported in Hurungwe, a rural area in Mashonaland West
Province, about 300km north of the capital, Harare, "where
10 cases have been reported, but no deaths as yet. WHO [World Health
Organisation] is still investigating", the UN said in a recent
situation report on cholera and anthrax.
Anthrax is caused by
the bacterium, Bacillus anthracis, and mostly affects wild animals
and domesticated cattle, although it can be transferred to humans
through inhalation of the bacteria's spores from a live or infected
dead animal, blood contact if the skin is broken, or by eating the
undercooked meat of a diseased animal. Anthrax is curable if diagnosed
early.
120
deaths
The UN noted that "a
cholera outbreak has been a cause of concern in Zimbabwe since February
2008 ... so far 120 deaths have been recorded cumulatively, with
the highest percentage found in Mashonaland Central" Province
in the country's north.
The collapse of health
and municipal services is seen as the cause for the spread of the
disease, with local authorities failing to provide potable water,
rubbish collection and adequate sanitation, forcing people to dig
shallow wells to obtain household and drinking water in areas where
sewerage spills into streets because of poor, or non-existent, maintenance
regimes.
The state-owned Zimbabwe
National Water Authority (ZINWA) has pumped raw sewerage into Lake
Chivero, one of the reservoirs providing Harare with water; residents
with access to piped water often have to contend with a smelly greenish
discharge from their taps.
The UN noted in its report
that Zimbabwe was battling three cholera outbreaks in different
locations. Chitungwiza, a dormitory town 35km southeast of Harare,
had recorded 144 cholera cases and 15 deaths up to 13 October. UNICEF
has been trucking in 30,000 litres of water daily and providing
hygiene education.
In Mola, in the western
district of Kariba, there were 22 cases with one fatality as of
7 October, and "probably more cases within the community, unrecognised",
the UN report said.
Chinhoyi, in Mashonaland
West Province, had recorded 6 deaths by 13 October, and WHO reported
another 15 cases the following day, but "many more are assumed
to be in the community, and paediatric cases are being admitted
to the hospital."
Recurring
disease
A cholera outbreak on
31 August in Harare affected the townships of Mbare, Kuwadzana,
Highfields, Chikurubi and Mbvuku, in which 19 cases and one death
were recorded. The last case was reported on 24 September.
Nevertheless, even where
the cholera outbreaks have been brought under control, the UN report
warns: "These locations remain potentially risk areas, considering
cholera [is a] recurring trend."
The Combined
Harare Residents Association (CHRA) said in a statement that
Zimbabwe's political deadlock between President Robert Mugabe's
ZANU-PF and Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change was
having a direct impact on the provision of services.
"The water woes
that have seen many Harare residents losing their lives to cholera
outbreaks are a result of the ruthless decision to hand over the
administration of water and sewer services to ZINWA," the statement
said.
"CHRA urges the
powers that be to stop burying their heads in the sand and attend
to the governance stalemate as a matter of urgency."
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