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One dead,188 treated and discharged as cholera ravages Mandera

One  person has died while at least 188 have been treated for cholera in Kotulo, Mandera South, in the past one month, the  County’s Public Health Chief Officer has said.

The  Chief Officer, Ms. Rahama Abdullahi, said the person died due to delayed treatment.

“Since  April 6, we have had one death that occurred upon late arrival at the treatment center. We currently have nine  patients at the facility but they are all stable,” Ms. Abdullahi  said, adding the situation was under control as various actions had been taken.

“We set up a cholera treatment center with 50 beds. The situation has improved tremendously,” she said, adding water sources were treated, homes disinfected and public sanitation services offered.

“We have treated the two major water sources for the 10 villages at Kotulo and all our officers in other sub-counties are alert.” She added.

Ms. Abdullahi  further said the public was being educated on the disease and that fast food kiosks in the area that borders Wajir County had been closed.

“We have also taken steps to avert a possible crisis at three schools in the area,” she said.

To prevent the spread of the disease to other areas, all vehicles passing through Kotulo to Elwak or Wajir were also

disinfected.

“We are not taking chances. We have positioned our teams and sent medical supplies across the county to avert a crisis,” the officer said.

According to the Chief Officer, the index case was of a woman who had travelled from Nairobi, where an outbreak had been declared.

“The situation in Mandera is under control at the moment,” she said. “We are managing the situation with some assistance from Kenya Red Cross at the treatment center.”

Mandera last experienced a cholera outbreak in 2016, when 1,629 cases and 18 deaths were recorded.

Cholera is an infectious disease that causes severe diarrhoea and vomiting, which can lead to dehydration and death if untreated.

It  results from eating food or drinking water contaminated with a bacterium called vibrio cholerae, usually found in food  or water contaminated by the faeces of an infected person.

The  disease is most common in places with poor sanitation, crowding and famine.

By  Dickson  Githaiga

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