NewsWHO Releases $16m To Tackle Cholera

WHO Releases $16m To Tackle Cholera

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September 29, (THEWILL) – The World Health Organisation (WHO), has released $16 million from the WHO Contingency Fund for Emergencies, to tackle cholera.

WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, who disclosed this at a virtual news conference, said the organisation was providing essential supplies, coordinating on the ground response with partners, supporting countries, to detect, prevent and treat cholera and informing people how to protect themselves.

“To support this work, we have appealed for $160 million, and we have released more than $16 million from the WHO Contingency Fund for Emergencies. But the real solution to cholera lies in ensuring everyone has access to safe water and sanitation, which is an internationally recognized human right”, he said.

Glo

Ghebreyesus said data published by the WHO last week, showed that cases reported in 2022 were more than double those in 2021.

He said the preliminary data for 2023 suggested was likely to be even worse.

“So far, 28 countries have reported cases in 2023 compared with 16 during the same period in 2022. The countries with the most concerning outbreaks right now are Ethiopia, Haiti, Iraq and Sudan.

“Significant progress has been made in countries in Southern Africa, including Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, but these countries remain at risk as the rainy season approaches”, Ghebreyesus said.

Ghebreyesus, who said the worst affected countries and communities are poor, without access to safe drinking water or toilets; added that they also face shortages of oral cholera vaccine and other supplies, as well as overstretched health workers, who are dealing with multiple disease outbreaks and other health emergencies.

On COVID-19, Ghebreyesus noted that as the northern hemisphere winter approaches, the organisation continued to see concerning trends.

He said that among the relatively few countries that report them, both hospitalisations and ICU admissions have increased in the past 28 days, particularly in the Americas and Europe.

The WHO boss said vaccination levels among the most at-risk groups remained worryingly low.

“Two-thirds of the world’s population has received a complete primary series, but only one-third has received an additional, or “booster” dose. COVID-19 may no longer be the acute crisis it was two years ago, but that does not mean we can ignore it”, he said.

According to him, countries invested so much in building their systems to respond to COVID-19.

He urged countries to sustain those systems, to ensure people can be protected, tested and treated for COVID-19 and other infectious threats.

“That means sustaining systems for collaborative surveillance, community protection, safe and scalable care, access to countermeasures and coordination”, he said.

 

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