Drop in cholera cases
worldwide
A child is being vaccinated against cholera in Yemen (ANSA) |
In a new report, the World Health Organization (WHO) says
that a 60% decrease in global cholera cases in 2018, is the result of increased
engagement of cholera-hotspot countries and mass vaccination campaigns.
By Robin Gomes
The number of cholera cases decreased globally by 60% in
2018, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a report this week. The UN’s
health agency regards this as an “encouraging trend” in cholera prevention and
control in the world’s major hotspots of the infectious disease, including
Haiti, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
According to WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, the decrease is proof of the increased engagement of countries and
shows the vital role of mass cholera vaccination campaigns. “The long-term
solution for ending cholera,” he pointed out, “lies in increasing access to
clean drinking water and providing adequate sanitation and hygiene”.
Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal infection which is caused by
ingesting food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibro cholerae.
It affects both children and adults and can kill within hours if left
untreated. WHO estimates that each year cholera infects 1 million to 4 million
people and claims up to 143 000 lives.
According to WHO’s new report, there were nearly 500,000
cases of cholera and nearly 3000 deaths in 34 countries in 2918. This
represents a significant downward trend in cholera transmission that has
continued into 2019.
According to Dr Dominique Legros, who heads WHO’s cholera
programme, the decrease in the number of cholera cases appears to be linked to
large-scale vaccination campaigns and countries beginning to adopt the Global
Roadmap to 2030 strategy in their national cholera action plans. He urged
strengthening efforts to engage all cholera-endemic countries in this global
strategy to eliminate cholera.
The Global Roadmap aims to reduce cholera deaths by 90% and
to eliminate transmission in up to 20 countries by 2030.
The new report shows several countries, including Zambia,
South Sudan, Tanzania, Somalia, Bangladesh, and Nigeria have made significant
progress in developing national action plans within the framework of the Global
Roadmap strategy.
In 2018, WHO country offices worked with governments to
respond urgently to major outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Nigeria, Uganda, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe. WHO also worked with countries to
transition from outbreak response to longer-term cholera control and
elimination, in Haiti, United Republic of Tanzania (Zanzibar) and Zambia.
(Source: UN News/WHO)
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