Business Day

Massive cholera vaccine drive under way in Africa

• The oral doses, to be administer­ed to 2-million people in five countries, come from a global stockpile

- Agency Staff Geneva /AFP

The biggest cholera vaccine drive in history is under way in Africa aimed at reining in a spate of outbreaks across the continent, the UN and charity alliance Gavi said on Monday.

More than 2-million people will receive the oral cholera vaccine as part of five major campaigns in Malawi, Nigeria, South Sudan, Uganda and Zambia, Gavi said, adding that the campaigns should be complete by mid-June.

“This is an unpreceden­ted response to a spike in cholera outbreaks across Africa,” Gavi chief Seth Berkley said in a statement.

At least 12 regions or countries in sub-Saharan Africa are facing cholera outbreaks, according to Gavi and the World Health Organisati­on (WHO). According to the UN health agency, cholera infects 1.3-million to 4-million people every year and kills an estimated 21,000 to 143,000, mainly in poor countries.

The campaigns in Africa are being implemente­d by the health ministries in the five countries, where thousands of cases of the disease have been reported.

The vaccines themselves come from a global stockpile, which has grown substantia­lly in recent years, in step with the recognitio­n of the role the vaccine can play in halting the spread of the bacterial disease.

“Oral cholera vaccines are a key weapon in our fight against cholera,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in a statement, stressing the need to improve access to clean water and sanitation, train health workers and work with communitie­s on prevention.

Cholera, which causes potentiall­y deadly diarrhoea, is contracted by ingesting food or water contaminat­ed with a bacterium carried in human faeces and spread through poor sanitation and dirty drinking water. Untreated, it can kill in hours.

The WHO recommends giving the oral cholera vaccine in two doses, the first offering protection for six months and the second for three to five years.

“We have worked hard to ensure there is now enough vaccine supply to keep the global stockpile topped up and ready for most eventualit­ies,” Berkley said.

The campaign in Nigeria, where 1,700 cases have been reported, aims to provide 600,000 people with two vaccine doses each, while the campaign in Malawi, where more than 900 people have been infected, aims to provide vaccine protection to 500,000.

About 360,000 doses of the vaccine have been shipped to Uganda, where the Kyangwali camp housing Congolese refugees is facing a cholera outbreak that has killed dozens and left more than 900 in hospital.

In this campaign, only one dose is being provided per person to increase the spread. The country is also planning to vaccinate 1.7-million more people in coming months.

Another 113,800 doses have been shipped to South Sudan as a prevention measure ahead of the country’s rainy season. And 667,100 doses are being delivered to Zambia as part of a second round of vaccinatio­n.

“Every rainy season, cholera springs up and brings devastatio­n to communitie­s across Africa,” said Matshidiso Moeti, WHO’s regional director for Africa. “With this historic cholera vaccinatio­n drive, countries in the region are demonstrat­ing their commitment to stopping cholera from claiming more lives.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? The push to better health: Previous cholera campaigns, such as the one highlighte­d in the poster above, have emphasised certain preventive measures. A new cholera vaccine campaign, the biggest in history, is currently under way in parts of Africa...
/Reuters The push to better health: Previous cholera campaigns, such as the one highlighte­d in the poster above, have emphasised certain preventive measures. A new cholera vaccine campaign, the biggest in history, is currently under way in parts of Africa...

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