The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Cholera vaccinatio­n blitz on the cards

- BY BRENT SHAMU

THe government is planning to roll out a countrywid­e cholera vaccinatio­n programme as authoritie­s battle to contain the spread of the diarrhoeal disease first detected in February this year.

The first case was detected on February 12, 2023 in Chegutu, mashonalan­d West. The disease has spread across the country with 62 confirmed deaths and 211 suspected deaths by December 18, 2023.

As of December 18, 2023, 12 287 suspected cases including 1 527 culture confirmed cases had been reported in all the 10 provinces of the country.

In Harare, where supplies of drinking water and sanitation facilities are erratic and infrastruc­ture has collapsed due to years of neglect, cholera is now endemic.

Infection Control Associatio­n of Zimbabwe Trust (ICAZ-T) president Celestino Dhege confirmed the planned rollout of the cholera vaccinatio­n exercise.

“We have one of the tools for infection prevention and control (IPC) emergency response,” Dhege said.

“The vaccines are there, but I am not sure of the dates when they will be rolled out to the public.

“IPC received some of the emergency materials like preventive clothing for the workers, buckets and other materials.”

However, efforts to get more informatio­n from Health minister Douglas mombeshora were fruitless.

earlier this month, the World Health organisati­on (WHo) delivered a substantia­l consignmen­t of crucial supplies, totalling 22 metric tonnes to fight cholera.

According to WHo, the cholera supplies were funded through the contributi­ons from Health Resilience Fund, european Union, embassy of Ireland, GAVI, The Vaccine Alliance and the UK Aid (Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t office).

The consignmen­t consisted of medical supplies, cholera kits and personal protective equipment.

WHo also promised to support the implementa­tion of vital prevention measures, including water purificati­on and sanitation initiative­s. In November, Harare declared a state of emergency over the cholera outbreak.

Health experts have drawn comparison­s with 2008, when cholera claimed at least 4 000 lives in Zimbabwe and at least 100 000 people fell ill.

That outbreak happened at the height of the country's economic crisis when most of the public hospitals were closed due to a shortage of medicines and the flight of health workers.

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