Venezuela doctors sound
alarm on reported return of diphtheria
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[October 07, 2016]
By Alexandra Ulmer
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan doctors on
Thursday warned of a diphtheria outbreak in the crisis-stricken country,
calling on the government to boost availability of scarce vaccines and
antibiotics to stem the disease which local media and the opposition
report has killed some two dozen people.
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Diphtheria is an infectious disease that chiefly affects the throat
and upper airways and is spread through physical or respiratory
contact. It is fatal in around 5 to 10 percent of cases, according
to the World Health Organization.
Last seen in Venezuela in 1992, diphtheria has been spreading in the
southern jungle state of Bolivar, according to a statement by two
local public health associations on Thursday.
"We're very worried because there could be an epidemic in the rest
of the country," infectious disease specialist Doctor Ana Carvajal,
one of the authors of the report, told Reuters.
The statement said 17 people had died from diphtheria in Venezuela,
citing local media. Opposition lawmaker and oncologist Jose Manuel
Olivares earlier this week put the number at 22.
Reuters could not independently confirm the reports.
The leftist government of Nicolas Maduro, which has stopped
publishing weekly health statistics, has not spoken about the
alleged outbreak. The Health Ministry did not immediately respond to
a request for comment.
Venezuela's economy is in a tailspin, with shortages of items from
disinfectant to chemotherapy drugs crippling the health sector and
leaving 30 million Venezuelans struggling to access basic medical
care.
The ruling party governor of Bolivar said this week that there was
no proven case of diphtheria but that the state was already
vaccinating people.
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"400,000 doses of vaccines have arrived for Bolivar to guarantee all
citizens can be vaccinated," governor Francisco Rangel said on
Twitter, criticizing those seeking to spread "panic." He tweeted
pictures of people being vaccinated.
Venezuela's opposition, which is pushing to remove the unpopular
Maduro in a recall referendum this year, has slammed what it says is
the government's attempt to hide the outbreak.
"The resurgence of diphtheria shows the failure of health policies,"
lawmaker Olivares said.
Diphtheria was once a major cause of illness and death of children
but is now very rare in developed countries due to vaccinations.
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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