Mpox patients lack medicine, food, in east DR Congo hospital
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[September 03, 2024]
By Djaffar Al Katanty
KAVUMU, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Dozens of feverish
patients lay on thin mattresses on the floor of a makeshift mpox
isolation ward in east Democratic Republic of Congo, as overstretched
hospital workers grappled with drug shortages and lack of space to
accommodate the influx.
Congo is the epicenter of an mpox outbreak that the World Health
Organization declared to be a global public health emergency last month.
Vaccines are set to arrive within days to fight the new strain of the
virus, while Congo's President Felix Tshisekedi has allowed a first $10
million disbursement to fight the outbreak.
But at the hospital complex in the town of Kavumu, where 900 symptomatic
patients have been taken in over the past three months, health workers
are desperate for support.
"We run out of medicine every day," said head doctor Musole Mulamba Muva.
"There are many challenges we struggle to overcome with our local
means," he said, noting that donations from international organizations
rapidly dwindled.
Last week there were 135 patients in the mpox ward, children and adults
combined, crammed between three large plastic tents pitched into damp
earth without a floor cover.
Relatives that usually provide the bulk of meals in underfunded public
facilities such as the Kavumu hospital were banned from visiting the
mpox ward to avoid contamination.
"We do not have anything to eat," said Nzigire Lukangira, the
32-year-old mother of a hospitalized toddler.
"When we ask for something to lower our children's temperature, they do
not give us anything," she said, coaxing honey into her daughter's
mouth.
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Omar Kagoma shows the marks on the skin of his six-year-old son
Moussa Niyonkuru, after he recovered from Mpox, outside their house
in Kinama zone, in Bujumbura, Burundi, August 28, 2024. REUTERS/Ngendakumana
Evrard
The head of Congo's mpox response
team, Cris Kacita, acknowledged that parts of the vast central
African country lacked medicine and that dispatching donations,
including 115 tons of medicine from the World Bank, was a priority.
TRADITIONAL REMEDIES
Mpox causes flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions and, while
usually mild, it can kill. Children, pregnant women and people with
weakened immune systems are all at higher risk of complications.
Like other mothers in the Kavumu mpox ward, Lukangira had started
improvising with traditional remedies to ease her baby's pain. They
dipped their fingers in potassium bicarbonate or salty lemon juice
and popped their children's blisters. Adult patients did the same to
themselves.
Most cases came from the town itself and surrounding villages. Two
other makeshift mpox wards have been set up in the area.
Local health ministry representative, doctor Serge Munyau Cikuru,
called on the government to continue pushing for vaccines.
Kacita said high-risk contacts and nine priority areas had already
been identified for the first vaccination stage.
There were 19,710 suspected cases of mpox reported since the start
of the year in Congo by Aug. 31, according to the health ministry.
Of those, 5,041 were confirmed and 655 were fatal.
(Reporting by Djaffar Al Katanty; Additional reporting by Ange
Kasongo in Kinshasa; Writing by Sofia Christensen; Editing by Alex
Richardson)
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