/ 30 November 2008

Health minister fears onset of rains in cholera-hit Zim

Zimbabwe's Health Minister insisted on Sunday that the country's crumbling medical system was taking all necessary measures to combat cholera.

Zimbabwe’s Health Minister insisted on Sunday that the country’s crumbling medical system was taking all necessary measures to combat a cholera epidemic, even as more than 1,000 new cases were reported.

Since the current outbreak began in August, Health Minister David Parirenyatwa said 425 people had died and a total of 11 071 suspected cases had been reported nationwide.

The last estimate from the United Nations on Friday had put the toll at about 9 900 cases.

Parirenyatwa said the health services were trying to contain the disease’s alarming spread, but warned that already poor sanitation was likely to worsen with the onset of the rainy season.

”What I am afraid of is that now that the rainy season has come, all the faeces lying in the bushes will be washed into shallow wells and contaminate the water,” Parirenyatwa told the government mouthpiece Sunday Mail newspaper.

”Management of water and sanitation is primary to the cholera problem.” He emphasised the need for clean water, a proper sewage system and refuse collection.

While cholera has long posed a sporadic problem in rural Zimbabwe, the current epidemic is hitting the nation’s cities.

The movement of people between Zimbabwe’s cities was making the disease harder to contain since it first broke out in the populous neighbourhood of Budiriro in the capital, the minister said.

Cholera is a highly contagious but treatable disease that causes severe diarrhoea and vomiting.

Zimbabwe’s dilapidated infrastructure has made clean water a luxury, with many people relying on shallow wells and latrines.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Zimbabweans are seeking treatment in South Africa.

Many hospitals in Zimbabwe, which has the world’s highest inflation rate of more than 230-million percent, have been shut. – AFP

 

AFP