Outbreak of yellow fever
in DR Congo could go global, children's charity warns
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[August 16, 2016]
By Umberto Bacchi
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - An
outbreak of yellow fever that has killed hundreds of people in central
Africa could spread across the world, an international children's
charity warned on Tuesday, even as a massive vaccination campaign was
expected to get underway.
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The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) declared a yellow fever
epidemic in June after the hemorrhagic virus spread from Angola,
where at least 360 people have died since last December in the worst
outbreak in decades.
A wide effort to bring the outbreak under control by vaccinating
more than 10 million people in DRC was due to start this week after
delays due to shortages of vaccine and syringes.
"There is no known cure for yellow fever and it could go global,"
said Save the Children's country director for DRC, Heather Kerr, in
a statement.
The yellow fever vaccine takes one year to manufacture. Save the
Children said there are only 7 million emergency vaccines after
stocks were depleted in series of outbreaks earlier this year.
World Health Organisation (WHO) advisers have recommended using a
fifth of the standard dose of vaccine in the event of a global
shortage - enough to immunize temporarily but not to give lifelong
immunity.
"We've got to urgently reach as many children and families as we can
with the supplies that are left, and this is the only way we are
able to do that right now," Kerr said.
The WHO aims to vaccinate 8.5 million people in Congo's capital
Kinshasa and 3.4 million in DRC's border areas before the onset of
the rainy season in October, to reduce the risk of mosquito-borne
diseases spreading.
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A total of 2,269 suspected cases and 16 deaths have been reported in
DRC as of August 8, the WHO said.
Angola is starting a campaign this week to vaccinate 3 million
people. The epidemic appears to be declining in the Southern African
country with no confirmed cases reported in July or August, the WHO
said.
(Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi, Editing by Katie
Nguyen.; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the
charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news,
women's rights, trafficking, property rights and climate change.
Visit http://news.trust.org)
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