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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Cholera is not going away anytime soon
IRIN News
May 26, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84562
Zimbabwe's cholera caseload
is expected to top the 100,000 mark within the next few days, amid
warnings by aid agencies that although the disease is subsiding,
it has not been eradicated and could flare up again.
"The epidemic
has entrenched itself as Africa's worst outbreak in more than 15
years," killing more than 4,300 people and infecting 98,309
since August 2008, with an "unacceptably high" 4.4 percent
death rate, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies (IFRC), said in a report,
The Spectre of Cholera Remains in Zimbabwe, released on 26 May.
In terms of international
norms, a "controlled cholera outbreak" usually leads to
a fatality rate of one percent or less. The waterborne disease,
characterised by watery diarrheal stools, vomiting and rapid dehydration,
can cause death within 24 hours if not treated.
The severity of Zimbabwe's
epidemic is attributed to the collapse of the water, sanitation
and health infrastructure. The conditions that caused the outbreak
- the worst on the continent since cholera rampaged through refugee
camps in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, in 1994, killing up
to 40,000 people in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide - are
still intact.
"The eradication
of cholera in Zimbabwe, or the complete conclusion to this current
epidemic, is unlikely unless the underlying causes of the health
crises are addressed," the IFRC noted in its report.
Worst-case
scenario just got worse
In December 2008 the
World Health Organisation (WHO) predicted a worst-case scenario
of 60,000 cases - the number reached in February 2009 - and then
revised its prediction to 115,000 cases. At the current fatality
rate, should the revised WHO forecast be realised, the number of
deaths from the outbreak would surpass 5,000 people.
The rate of cholera infections
has been slowed by the end of the rainy season, and a humanitarian
response in which thousands of community-based volunteers were mobilised
in education drives, nationwide cholera treatment centres were establishment
and millions of litres of clean water were distributed, but these
are all temporary measures.
Emma Kundishora, secretary-general
of the Zimbabwe Red cross Society, told IRIN the NGO was building
boreholes and digging latrines in rural areas, "as we don't
want this situation to be repeated," but funding was becoming
critical.
The IFRC expressed dismay
at the "surprisingly slow donor response" to the cholera
outbreak, and said that less than half its original budget of 10.17
million Swiss francs (US$9.35 million) to combat the disease had
been covered, resulting in the "premature" scaling-down
of cholera-related assistance.
"But while the international
community continues to wrestle with the politics of Zimbabwe, Zimbabweans
are still being infected," it commented.
Hollow
victories
"The steady decline
in the spread of the illness should not be seen as a complete victory,"
the IFRC urged. "Unless significant efforts are made to rehabilitate
at least some components of the country's degraded infrastructure,
communities remain vulnerable to further and severe outbreaks."
Zimbabwe's cholera outbreak
sprang from a confluence of events: unchecked infrastructural degradation,
extreme weather conditions, HIV/AIDS, economic decay and widespread
hunger.
"The endemic frustrations
of operating in Zimbabwe - inadequate transport and communications
- also played out more acutely. Aid organisations were often only
made aware of community-level outbreaks when their treatment centres
were inundated with cases," the IFRC said.
The effects of malnutrition
- Zimbabwe is the world's most food-dependent country - "with
somewhere between 65 and 80 percent of the population reliant on
food aid", the IFRC said - enhanced the disease's deadly efficiency.
The 2008 harvest was
the worst in the country's history and 2009 is not expected to be
much better. "The food crisis is undermining stunted efforts
to provide antiretroviral treatment, and is contributing to the
high fatality rate of the cholera epidemic," the ICRC pointed
out.
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