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Is another cholera epidemic on the way
IRIN News
December 12, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94452
Waterborne diseases,
such as typhoid, dysentery and watery diarrhoea - all approaching
epidemic levels - are creating concerns that conditions exist for
a reprise of the 2008/09 cholera epidemic, which killed more than
4,000 people and infected nearly 100,000 others.
The Consolidated Appeal
Process (CAP) for Zimbabwe, launched on 9 December, is asking for
US$268 million for humanitarian assistance in 2012. The CAP highlights
a decade of "neglect" of the country's water sanitation
and hygiene sector (WASH), which has left 8 million people, or about
two-thirds of the population, "with limited access to WASH
and health services".
"A third of rural
Zimbabweans still drink from unprotected water sources and are thus
exposed to waterborne diseases. While cholera incidence is significantly
decreased compared to past years, localized outbreaks continued
in 2011 due to poor infrastructure for water, sanitation, hygiene
and health," the CAP pointed out.
Since the year-long cholera
epidemic, which spilled across the border into neighbouring South
Africa, donors have spent about $80 million on the sector, although
the Country Status Overview (CSO2) Report for Zimbabwe, by the World
Bank and the government, estimates that to salvage the sector and
"bring basic services to reliable and sustainable levels both
in rural and urban areas" will require an annual investment
of $800 million.
The CAP has earmarked
$23.6 million for WASH in 2012, the third-highest sector appeal.
Food is allocated $127 million, and agriculture $32 million. It
is projected that about one million people will require food assistance
in the first quarter of 2012, as "Rates for chronic and acute
child malnutrition still stand at 34 percent and 2.4 percent respectively."
In recent months hundreds
of typhoid cases have been reported in the capital, Harare, mostly
in the densely populated Dzivarasekwa township.
Intermittent water supplies
in urban areas because of the dilapidated water and sanitation infrastructure,
the start of the rainy season, and cut-offs of water to households
unable to pay their bills, have forced the urban poor to sink shallow
wells, which are easily contaminated. Media reports say shallow
wells in Dzivarasekwa have tested positive for typhoid.
The latest Zimbabwe Weekly
Epidemiological Bulletin, for weeks 46 and 47, published jointly
by Zimbabwe's health ministry and World Health Organization,
say dysentery and diarrhoea are approaching epidemic levels, although
there are no confirmed cases of cholera in the bulletin for these
weeks.
Monitoring
A health sector official,
who declined to be identified, told IRIN that cases of watery diarrhoea
in Chipinge and other parts of the eastern province of Manicaland
were being closely watched after reports of a suspected outbreak
of cholera, but this has not been officially confirmed.
A senior official of
a humanitarian NGO, who also did not wish to be named, told IRIN:
"We are closely monitoring the situation and will only comment
and activate our programmes if the presence of cholera is officially
confirmed."
Cephas Zinhumwe,
head of the National
Association of Non Governmental Organizations (NANGO), an umbrella
group for NGOs, told IRIN that "The resurgence of waterborne
diseases like typhoid and cholera [although unconfirmed], the risk
of malaria in the presence of collapsing waste management services
and excessive heat, are equally disturbing developments."
Despite a bleak outlook
for WASH, "Major potential disasters have been contained and
many utilities, including in Harare, are now strengthened and able
to provide more reliable services," the CAP noted.
"In rural areas,
although situations have improved and the incidence of cholera emergencies
has reduced throughout the country, there are still highly vulnerable
areas like Chipinge and Chiredzi in the eastern and southeastern
parts of Zimbabwe," the CAP said, "where situations
contributing to cholera outbreaks have not yet been fully put under
control, and unnecessary loss of life due to cholera and other WASH-related
diseases still continues."
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