WHO warns of cholera risk
at annual haj, praises Saudi preparedness
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[July 14, 2017] By
Tom Miles
GENEVA (Reuters) - A cholera epidemic in
Yemen, which has infected more than 332,000 people, could spread during
the annual haj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia in September, although Saudi
authorities are well prepared, the World Health Organization (WHO) said
on Friday.
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The pilgrimage draws 2-4 million Muslims every year, including 1.5-2
million foreigners, raising the risk from diseases such as dengue,
yellow fever, Zika virus and meningococcal disease as well as
cholera, the WHO said.
Dominique Legros, a WHO cholera expert, said Saudi Arabia had not
had a cholera outbreak in many years thanks to reinforced
surveillance and rapid tests to detect cases early.
"Don’t forget that today we are speaking of Yemen but they are
receiving pilgrims from a lot of endemic countries, and they managed
not to have an outbreak, essentially by making sure that living
conditions, access to water in particular, hygienic conditions, are
in place," he told a regular U.N. briefing.
"They are well-prepared in my view."
The incubation period of the disease, which spreads through
ingestion of faecal matter and causes acute watery diarrhoea, is a
matter of hours. Once symptoms start, cholera can kill within hours
if the patient does not get treatment.
But people with symptoms are just the tip of the iceberg because 80
percent of patients show no symptoms, Legros said.
"That’s why we advise countries against airport screening for
patients. The Saudis don’t do that. It's useless, technically
speaking."
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The United Nations has blamed the warring sides in Yemen and their
international allies, including Saudi Arabia, for fuelling the
11-week cholera outbreak, driving millions of people closer to
famine, and for hindering aid access.
The WHO has rolled out an emergency treatment programme, based on
the vestiges of Yemen's shattered health system, to try and catch
new cases early and stop the explosive spread of the disease.
The number of new cases has continued to grow by about 6,000 per
day, but the number of deaths appears to have slowed dramatically,
according to Reuters analysis of WHO data.
Death rates have slumped from 20-40 in recent weeks to an average of
nine per day over the past six days.
(Reporting by Tom Miles)
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