The Manica Post

Cholera door-to-door vaccinatio­n rolled out

- Samuel Kadungure

THE cholera vaccinatio­n campaign was rolled out in Manicaland on Tuesday and will run until February 10 in all hotspots in Buhera, Chimaniman­i, Chipinge, Makoni and Mutare.

This comes as Makoni District has become the latest epicentre of the cholera outbreak in Manicaland after recording three suspected deaths and several cases this week.

Mobile teams are conducting a door-todoor blitz that seeks to minimise gatherings, while fixed vaccinatio­n points at all health facilities in the catchment area have also been set up.

Since the outbreak started in February 2023, the water-borne disease has killed at least 154 people in Manicaland, thereby making the province one of the hardest hit in the country.

A multi-sectoral cholera response plan led by the Ministry of

Health and Child Care in collaborat­ion with Government’s partners has been rolled out to prevent the spread of the disease through improved access to safe water, sanitation, personal and food hygiene, as well as the disseminat­ion of preventive messages.

The introducti­on of the cholera vaccine is another tool to prevent the further spread of the disease.

Manicaland provincial health promotions officer, Mrs Agnes Mugumbate said the vaccinatio­n campaign is progressin­g well in the province.

At national level, the vaccinatio­n blitz is targeting 2.3 million people aged a year and above in the 26 high risk districts in seven provinces, including Manicaland.

Mrs Mugumbate said mapping is still ongoing and therefore she could not yet disclose the vaccinatio­n target for Manicaland.

The vaccine being administer­ed is the Euvichol-Plus, which is taken orally, with a dose protecting the recipient against infection for six months.

Mrs Mugumbate said while the vaccine provides additional protection against cholera infection, it does not replace other prevention protocols like regular hand-washing under running safe water, drinking treated or boiled water, safe disposal of solid, liquid and human waste, as well as observing food and environmen­tal hygiene standards.

Mrs Mugumbate said health officials will continue engaging civil society organisati­ons, faith-based organisati­ons, religious and traditiona­l leaders and community structures to create demand for the vaccinatio­n services in targeted hotspots.

“The vaccinatio­n of cholera started on Tuesday and will run until Saturday (February 10)in Buhera, Chimaniman­i, Chipinge, Mutarecity and rural. The vaccinatio­n is taking place in all hotpots in selected wards in these districts, targeting those who are one year old and above.

“The vaccine is being administer­ed orally and the programme is going on well,” she said.

“The doses were allocated according to hotspots in affected wards in each province. The target population in the wards formed the basis of allocation of the quantities of vaccines received in the province. We started with the hotspots, and when the vaccine is readily available we will roll out to the other areas,” she added.

Mrs Mugumbate said all gatherings and funerals in cholera-affected areas will continue to be supervised in order to ensure adequate clean water, sanitation provision and other hygienic practices to reduce transmissi­on, adding that all persons with diarrhoea should start taking the salt and sugar solution and quickly report to their nearest health facility.

However, addressing vaccine hesitancy and the negative influence of anti-vaccine groups has been a major challenge in the province, with religious objectors allegedly shunning treatment, while in some cases patients present late for treatment, thereby leading to high institutio­nal fatalities.

“Our communitie­s should receive the ◆

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cholera vaccinatio­n because it is a response by Government to reduce the spread of cholera, and those who have received the vaccine should continue maintainin­g a high standard of food and environmen­tal hygiene.

“The vaccine will protect us from the disease, and we are encouragin­g members of divergent religious and cultural beliefs to embrace this initiative and continue practicing good hygiene standards,” said Mrs Magumbate.

This publicatio­n understand­s that the cholera wave has encroached into Makoni District amid revelation­s that some religious sect members are allegedly concealing infected and dead bodies of their family members, thereby compromisi­ng Government’s life-saving health interventi­ons.

The sect members in Chiduku, Nedziwa and Nzvimbe areas of Makoni are allegedly conducting burials of those who would have succumbed to cholera without the requisite supervisio­n by infection prevention and control specialist­s. This has seen funerals turning into super spreaders.

The affected areas are vulnerable due to poor sanitation, overcrowde­d households, poor access roads, unsafe drinking water, unhygienic conditions, and ignorance about the disease.

Makoni District Medical Officer, Dr Tendai Nyafesa said some of the victims are being concealed and shunning treatment, while in some instances others are presented late, leading to fatalities.

Dr Nyafesa said there is urgent need to address the treatment hesitancy through an inclusive community engagement strategy that provides accurate informatio­n on the disease, as well as debunking religious and cultural myths on medical treatment.

“There is a sudden cholera outbreak in Chiduku, Nedziwa and Nzvimbe areas, and on Monday only, we recorded three suspected deaths and several cases that are being managed on site. These cases could be more.

“However, our efforts to save the situation are being militated by the spirituali­sation of the illness by some members of religious sects who are concealing the sick and their family members’ dead bodies.

“They are even conducting suspected cholera burials without the requisite supervisio­n of our infection prevention and control specialist­s, this turns the funerals into super spreaders.

‘‘Those who attend such funerals risk being infected, but they then refuse to seek medical attention, thereby creating a vicious cycle,” he said.

Dr Nyafesa said there is need to strengthen the five pillars that are critical in the eliminatio­n of cholera, that is public health emergency preparedne­ss and response; water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH); infrastruc­ture rehabilita­tion; community empowermen­t, as well as innovative financing and resource mobilisati­on.

“The water and sanitation in the affected areas is poor. They get their water from Mucheke River, and the settlement is difficult to access as there are no proper roads.

“The communitie­s need to go back to the basics and prioritise access to clean water and sanitation, improve primary care and public health, including rapid diagnosis and treatment of cases to stop cholera from spreading,” said Dr Nyafesa.

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 ?? Picture : Tinai Nyadzayo ?? Gogo Marita Mubvumba (100) of Chikanga Phase Two in Mutare receives the oral cholera dose during the ongoing vaccinatio­n campaign against the bacterial disease that ends tomorrow. The doses were allocated according to hotspots in affected wards in each province.
Picture : Tinai Nyadzayo Gogo Marita Mubvumba (100) of Chikanga Phase Two in Mutare receives the oral cholera dose during the ongoing vaccinatio­n campaign against the bacterial disease that ends tomorrow. The doses were allocated according to hotspots in affected wards in each province.

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