Arab News

KSRelief delivers first shipment of drugs to treat Yemen cholera epidemic

- RODOLFO C. ESTIMO JR.

RIYADH: The first shipment of drugs donated by the King Salman Center for Relief and Humanitari­an Aid (KSRelief) to treat the cholera epidemic in Yemen has arrived at a hospital in Aden.

Patients and doctors at the hospital expressed thanks to the Center for its aid, and praised its rapid response to combat the disease.

The aid is part of a medical convoy that KSRelief recently sent to address the epidemic. It contains 550 tons of supplies carried by 25 trucks.

The aid is part of a campaign launched by KSRelief and the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

KSRelief General Supervisor Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah signed an agreement last month with the WHO for $8.2 million for Yemen’s central provinces.

The WHO on Friday announced an outbreak of the infectious disease, with 791 deaths out of 102,000 cases, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported. The SPA said 46 percent of the cases are children and 33 percent are elderly.

Cholera has spread to 19 governorat­es in Yemen, the WHO said. The most affected areas include Ibb, Dhamar, Hajah, Mahwit and Ramah.

To control the epidemic in these hotspots, people with cholera should be moved to other parts of the country to slow down the spread of the disease and to save lives, the WHO added.

Current resources in Yemen are not enough to combat the spread of the disease because more than half of the medical facilities in the country are closed for maintenanc­e, said a WHO spokesman in Geneva.

This is exacerbate­d by the lack of access to clean drinking water and sanitation among 14.5 million people, and the inability of health care staff to receive their salaries for the last eight months.

The spokesman said malnutriti­on is rampant in Yemen. The WHO had intervened to improve water and sanitation facilities.

It had also cleared the mobilizati­on of water tankers and water supply stations in a number of houses, and the distributi­on of hygiene tools and disinfecti­on. It is also providing medical supplies and expanding network treatment centers.

Since April 27, the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) has provided 197,999 bags of intravenou­s solutions and drugs.

 ??  ?? A Yemeni boy receives treatment at a hospital in the southern city of Aden on Saturday. (SPA)
A Yemeni boy receives treatment at a hospital in the southern city of Aden on Saturday. (SPA)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia