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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Cholera:
The terrifying reality!
Movement
for Democratic Change
November 25, 2008
Zimbabwe is
currently facing its most serious cholera epidemic ever. The disease
has spread across the country and claimed the lives of hundreds.
Medecins sans Frontiers have warned that the situation is exceptionally
serious and on 24th November claimed that 1.4 million people are
potentially at risk. Even the state-owned Chronicle has reported
a death toll of 44 at Beitbridge and reports have recently been
received of people dying in Bulawayo of cholera. If this is not
treated as a national disaster and if clean drinking water, proper
medication and adequate sewerage systems are not restored throughout
Zimbabwe, our entire population is potentially at risk.
Since we are
all at risk, let us all as Zimbabweans respond rapidly to this crisis.
Firstly, we
need to know what cholera is:
Cholera is a
highly infectious bacterial disease. It is spread through drinking
contaminated water and touching faeces (human waste) with hands,
which is then passed to the mouth. The symptoms for cholera are
watery diarrhoea, sometimes vomiting, muscle cramps and body weakness.
Secondly, we
need to know how to prevent it:
- Most importantly,
we must wash our hands with hot, soapy after using the toilet,
before eating and preparing food, visiting public places, after
attending funerals and visiting sick people.
- We need to
sterilize our water. We must boil all our water for drinking,
brushing teeth and washing food for at least five minutes in order
to kill the cholera bacteria. If it is hard to boil water because
of fuel shortages, perhaps share the task of boiling water with
neighbours.
- Water can
also be treated with household bleach eg jik. Make up a 1 litre
solution of 250ml bleach to 750ml water (this solution is NOT
to be drunk). Add three drops of this solution to every 1 litre
of water, which can then be used for drinking
- We need to
eat food while it is hot and thoroughly cooked. We must know that
our food has been hygienically prepared.
- Be aware
of where children are playing, especially as there is much raw
sewerage running through our cities. Help them to wash their hands
and keep clean.
- Avoid under-cooked
or raw fish.
- Avoid salads,
especially lettuce - they might have been washed with contaminated
water
Simple rule:
Boil it, Cook it, Peel it or Forget it!
Third, we need
to know how to treat cholera:
- Cholera causes
severe dehydration, so the treatment is to restore the body's
water supply by drinking water, preferably using an Oral Rehydration
Solution. This can be made from eight teaspoons of sugar and one
teaspoon of salt to every one litre of boiled water. The patient
must receive only sterilized water.
- In severe
cases, an intra-venous drip must be used.
- Sometimes,
antibiotics are also necessary.
- Simple rule:
It is VERY IMPORTANT that if you suspect someone to be suffering
from cholera, you must take them to the nearest clinic/ hospital/
doctor/ nurse to receive treatment. A person can die from cholera
within hours if untreated.
PLEASE PASS
THIS INFORMATION ON TO EVERYONE THAT YOU KNOW.
We are standing
on the brink of an enormous catastrophe. This is the reality of
the cholera outbreak in our country.
The more terrifying
reality is the vulnerability of our population to this terrible
disease. The majority of our people are malnourished, many are HIV
positive and there are thousands of children and elderly headed
families are already struggling to survive. Not only are these people
likely to be infected with cholera, they are very likely to die
from it.
We note that
those now in control of the Ministry of Health have called for help
from the WHO, UNICEF and the UNDP. However, this is too little,
too late. We place the responsibility for this crisis firmly at
the feet of the Mugabe regime. Many deaths could have already been
prevented had the regime fulfilled its obligations and provided
us with:
- adequate
sewerage systems
- appropriate
water treatment
- good health
facilities, a great deal of our hospitals and clinics are closed
- medical
professionals with the right conditions to work under.
- an end to
misappropriation of funds which has caused the malnourishment
and the desperate poverty of our nation
We, as the MDC
(M), are deeply concerned by this disastrous cholera outbreak. We
are committed to doing everything within our power to relieve the
terrible suffering of our people.
Therefore, we
urgently call upon our leaders, Arthur Mutambara, Morgan Tsvangirai
and Robert Mugabe to keep their promise made on 15th September.
We believe that the best hope for our country lies and in a functioning
government and particularly a health minister who genuinely is concerned
for the needs and well being of each and every Zimbabwean. We need
a new Health Minister who is genuinely concerned about the plight
of suffering Zimbabweans and who will urgently mobilise help from
the international community to ensure that we have sufficient medicines
and health personnel to deal with this catastrophe. We also need
a new Minister of Local Government and Minister of Public Works
who will urgently work with MDC controlled local councils to unblock
and repair our sewers.
All of this
will only happen when everyone puts the interests of the nation
before their personal interests. We must understand that this is
a national disaster which will only be fixed when we all start pulling
together. It is shameful that our beloved nation should have been
brought down to such a perilous state and it is now time to restore
the dignity of our nation and all its people.
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