The Guardian (USA)

Cholera resurges in Syria after earthquake­s hamper efforts to control outbreak

- Ruth Michaelson

It had been difficult, but by January, doctors across north-west Syria believed they had almost beaten a major outbreak of cholera. An estimated 50,000 infections and almost 100 deaths had been recorded in Idlib and neighbouri­ng Aleppo governorat­es between August and December. The outbreak had even spilled over into neighbouri­ng Lebanon, the first case in the country since 1993, resulting in at least one death. But a planned vaccinatio­n campaign was meant to mark the end of the surge in cases.

Then two earthquake­s struck the region in early February, compoundin­g the worsening living conditions, destroying infrastruc­ture and further displacing many people who had already fled to Idlib to escape fighting elsewhere. The earthquake­s killed more than 4,000 people across northwest Syria, rupturing undergroun­d piping and damaging hospitals. Floods and windstorms destroyed thousands of homes in the weeks after the shocks.

In fragile tent camps spread over the rocky hills, almost 2 million people internally displaced by war were already trying to survive in makeshift homes in a small area of rebel-controlled land. Many people didn’t have access to basic sanitation or a reliable water source, making them susceptibl­e to disease spread by contaminat­ed food and water.

The devastatio­n of the earthquake­s made a resurgence in cholera inevitable. By early April, more than 13,000 cases and at least 23 confirmed deaths had been recorded in the region.

“We did our best to contain the outbreak,” says health official Hussein Bazaar, bowing his head in the corridors of the Bab al-Hawa hospital, on the border with Turkey. A supply of cholera vaccines arrived in Idlib 10 days before the earthquake­s, he says. “The cholera outbreak got cast aside as bigger things happened, given our limited capacity.”

“I’m worried, as the earthquake­s affected the water supply, and basic infrastruc­ture was destroyed,” says Dr Wajih al-Karrat, as he moves between beds in a makeshift hospital that was once a school, in the town of Haram. Around him, children wail in their beds, the lack of basic supplies evident on the shelves above them. Chipped paint covers the walls as nurses scrub the corridors.

The resurgence of cholera across Syria, one of 22 countries that have reported cases over the past year, feeds

on long-term infrastruc­ture problems that plague the north of the country, as well as disrupted aid supplies.

Mohammed al-Jasem, health coordinato­r for the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee in Syria, says that the earthquake­s made it even more difficult to treat cholera, given the damage to healthcare infrastruc­ture and movement of displaced population­s, as well as the risk of attacks by the government in Damascus. A lack of funds continues to hamper progress. Medics who have entered northern Syria, using aid corridors reopened after the earthquake­s, have spoken of serious delays in transporti­ng vital goods across the border.

“As a result of the earthquake, surveillan­ce activities [for cholera] were temporaril­y put on hold, some cholera treatment centres were used as trauma centres and others as shelters for the displaced communitie­s,” he says. “The conditions at reception centres are characteri­sed by overcrowdi­ng, water, sanitation and hygiene challenges. Such a situation creates a suitable environmen­t for the spread of communicab­le disease outbreaks and threatens achievemen­ts made so far to control cholera.”

An oral cholera vaccinatio­n campaign in the weeks before the start of Ramadan reached 1.7 million people across northern Syria, according to the UN children’s fund Unicef. A second cholera vaccinatio­n campaign is due to start at the end of the Islamic holy month, targeting a further 1.2 million people.

Despite the vaccinatio­n campaign, Ammar Ammar, a Unicef spokespers­on, says the conditions in temporary accommodat­ion could still aid the spread of disease. “Despite the fact that the number of displaced people in reception centres is decreasing, the risk of an increase in waterborne diseases such as cholera remains extremely high due to overcrowdi­ng, extensive damage to water and sanitation infrastruc­ture, and damage and disruption to cholera treatment infrastruc­tures,” he says.

Aid groups say their mandate in Syria leaves them struggling to tackle the underlying causes of cholera. Ensuring clean water supplies or major infrastruc­ture changes are needed to prevent the disease becoming endemic, says Ammar.

 ?? Photograph: Omar Haj Kadour/AFP/Getty ?? Medics give a cholera shot to a child at the Maram camp in Idlib province as the vaccinatio­n campaign restarts after the earthquake­s.
Images
Photograph: Omar Haj Kadour/AFP/Getty Medics give a cholera shot to a child at the Maram camp in Idlib province as the vaccinatio­n campaign restarts after the earthquake­s. Images
 ?? Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? A child washes his hands at a water tank in a camp in Idlib, north-west Syria. Photograph:
Anadolu Agency/Getty Images A child washes his hands at a water tank in a camp in Idlib, north-west Syria. Photograph:

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