Sunday, October 24, 2010

Haiti Cholera Death Toll Tops 250....Over 3,000 Cases Reported


Paitents and families wait outside St. Nicolas Hospital on October 21 in St. Marc, 96 Km north of Port-au-Prince. UN health experts rushed to northern Haiti to help tackle a sudden outbreak of diarrhoeal disease that has left 250 dead. Tests showed trace of cholera.
 
 A multinational medical response has slowed deaths in a Haitian cholera epidemic that has killed more than 250 people so far, but the outbreak is likely to widen, a senior U.N. official said on Sunday. "We must gear up for a serious epidemic, even though we hope it won't happen," Nigel Fisher, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator in Haiti, told Reuters.

More than 3,000 cholera cases have been reported so far in the poor, earthquake-hit
Caribbean nation, which is experiencing its second humanitarian crisis since a catastrophic earthquake on January 12.The U.N., Haiti's government and aid partners have launched a major effort to try to contain the epidemic. This involved setting up cholera treatment centers to isolate patients in the two worst affected central provinces, Artibonite and Center, and in the capital Port-au-Prince. The main outbreak areas straddle the Artibonite River watershed, suspected of being the main propagator of the deadly disease. "We have registered a diminishing in numbers of deaths and of hospitalized people in the most critical areas ... The tendency is that it is stabilizing, without being able to say that we have reached a peak," Gabriel Thimote, director-general of Haiti's Health Department, told a news conference.

With a number of confirmed cases in Port-au-Prince and suspected cases reported in the town of L'Arcahaie and in the country's northern second city of Cap-Haitien, Fisher said the expectation was that the outbreak would spread geographically.  Accumulated deaths since the cholera outbreak began around a week ago stood at 253, while cases totaled 3,015, mostly in the Artibonite region, Haitian health authorities said.

President Rene Preval on Sunday visited Saint-Marc, the coastal town at the center of the Artibonite outbreak zone whose hospital had been overwhelmed with patients suffering the acute diarrheal disease that can kill in hours through dehydration. It is transmitted by contaminated water and food. Health workers were distributing kits of soap bars, water purification tablets and oral rehydration sachets to people on the Artibonite River watershed and also in Port-au-Prince.

The detection of five "imported" cholera cases in Port-au-Prince, involving patients who had traveled south to the city from the central outbreak zone, has raised fears of the virulent diarrheal disease spreading in the capital. Experts see as vulnerable to infection the inhabitants of Port-au-Prince's sprawling, squalid slums and around 1.3 million quake survivors left homeless by the earthquake who live precariously in tent and tarpaulin camps across the city.

The 12,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping mission in Haiti is using its helicopters, trucks and soldiers to back the campaign against the epidemic and Cuba's government has mobilized several hundred doctors and nurses to help treat the sick. Medical NGOs from around the world are also helping. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has dispatched a team of experts to Haiti and the U.S. Southern Command has also offered assistance.
ADDED NOTE:
Scientific papers published by seismology experts in the journal Nature Geoscience on Sunday said the January earthquake may have been caused by an unseen fault and pressure could be building for another quake.

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:07:00 PM

    What happen to all the donations the world gave Haiti ???
    When will this madness stop and use the donations for what it was intended for.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think the cholera is a result of the filthy conditions the people have been forced to live in since the quake: refugee camps, dirty water, unhygenic conditions, not enough antibiotics.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The money has been funnelled away into corrupt pockets unless I miss my guess.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous1:07:00 AM

    Point well taken amd if the money was used for the purpose it was given some of this could've been avoided...I think so.

    ReplyDelete

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