We've run out of cholera vaccines, WHO official says as disease surges
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[December 16, 2022]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) -The global stockpile of cholera vaccines the World
Health Organization helps manage is "currently empty or extremely low",
a WHO official said on Friday amid a resurgence of the disease around
the world.
The U.N. health agency says global fatality rates are rising and there
are around 30 countries around the world that have reported cholera
outbreaks this year, about a third higher than in a typical year.
"We have no more vaccines. More countries are continuing to request
(them) and it's extremely challenging," said Dr Philippe Barboza, WHO
Team Lead for Cholera and Epidemic Diarrhoeal Diseases.
He was referring to an emergency stockpile held by the International
Coordinating Group on vaccine provision that is managed by the WHO and
other partners. Typically, it has about 36 million doses available a
year. The shortage of vaccines has already prompted the WHO to
temporarily suspend the standard two-dose vaccination strategy in
October.
Barboza said part of the crunch was due to the decision by an Indian
manufacturer to halt exports, without giving details. He said a South
African manufacturer was planning to start production but it would take
"a few years".
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A logo is pictured outside a building of
the World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva, Switzerland, April 6,
2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
"It's probably far less attractive
to develop a vaccine for cholera, so basically a vaccine for poor
countries, than to develop COVID vaccines where the income made for
the vaccine is much higher," he said. A batch of more than 1 million
doses arrived in Haiti this week.
Cholera is spread by contaminated food or water and can cause acute
diarrhoea. Many people have mild symptoms but it can kill within
hours if untreated.
"It is not acceptable in the 21st century to have people dying of a
disease which is very well known and very easy to treat," Barboza
added.
Among the countries with outbreaks are those affected by poverty and
conflict such as Haiti and Yemen but the disease has also been
reported in countries like Lebanon which until recently was a
middle-income country, saying this should be a "wake-up" call for
other countries.
(Reporting by Emma Farge, editing by Nick Macfie)
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