NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Bulawayo on typhoid alert

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu

BULAWAYO is recording an increase in diarrhoea cases, which is blamed on water shortages and contaminat­ed water among other reasons as city fathers expressed fear of a typhoid outbreak. Since March, confirmed diarrhoea cases have killed 13 in Luveve and surroundin­g suburbs, and infected hundreds of people in other suburbs.

While the city is battling water shortage after authoritie­s decommissi­oned three supply dams, ageing water and sewage reticulati­on infrastruc­ture is piling more woes as seen by incessant pipe bursts, resulting in contaminat­ion of potable water and residents getting ill.

Bulawayo City Council has announced that diarrhoea cases will be treated for free at its clinics.

A council report on health, housing and education showed that city fathers were worried about the diarrhoea outbreak.

“The province continued to roll out intensifie­d emergency response mechanisms for all pillars to detect, contain, monitor, predict and manage the coronaviru­s disease in 2019 (COVID-19) and gastro-intestinal diseases (GIT) outbreaks which continued to evolve,” the council report read in part.

“The perennial water shortages in the province had resulted in a sharp increase in diarrhoea cases as communitie­s resort to alternativ­e water sources which may be of unsafe quality.”

According to the report, Nkulumane, Maqhawe, Nketa, Entumbane, Magwegwe and Mzilikazi are cited as the city’s diarrhoea hotspots.

“There was a need to strengthen implementa­tion of protective factors against contractin­g diarrhoea. Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), contact tracing, active case finding as well as health education, intensifie­d shop inspection­s were some of the activities. The diarrhoea case investigat­ions had continued aimed at containing a possible outbreak and to establish the aetiologic­al agent(s),” the council report read.

“Bulawayo was on high alert for typhoid as it was endemic in some neighbouri­ng cities.”

Typhoid is endemic in Harare. In 2019, Zimbabwe became the first African country to benefit from the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) funded mass Typbar-typhoid vaccinatio­n programme.

The WHO recommends the introducti­on of the Typbar-typhoid conjugate vaccine to be prioritise­d in countries with the highest burden of typhoid disease or a high burden of an antimicrob­ial-resistant strain. Zimbabwe meets the two criteria. In addition to the seasonal outbreak, the country has been experienci­ng a high level of resistance to the standard first line antibiotic treatment against typhoid.

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