skip navigation
Home  |  About Us  |  Accessibility  |  CRIN Quiz  |  FAQs  |  Contact Us
CRIN - Child Rights Information Network
 
Children's rights
Information by country
CRIN Themes
 

Print this pageIRAQ: Over 400 confirmed cholera cases so far

Date:

06/10/2008

Organisation:

IRIN News

Resource type:

News release


Web link http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=80763


بالعربـــــــــــية

[October 2008] The number of confirmed cholera cases has risen to 418 in central and southern Iraq, with six dead since an outbreak began on 20 August, a government spokesman said yesterday.

“We’ve registered 418 cholera cases in 10 provinces so far: Babil 222 cases, Baghdad 71, Basra 44, Karbala 34, Qadissiyah 30, Anbar seven, Najaf five, Maysan three, and Diyala and Kut one case each," said Ihsan Jaafar, director-general of the public health directorate and spokesman for the ministry's cholera control unit.

Jaafar told IRIN that one new cholera-related death - a child under five in Qadissiyah Province - had been added to the already registered five fatalities: a 10-year-old girl and a 61-year-old man in Babil Province; a three-year-old boy in Maysan; and an adult and child in Baghdad.

He said that of the newly registered cases 228 were males and 190 females; in 159 cases the patients’ ages were 5-70, with all other cases being among the under fives.

About 25km to the west of Qadissiyah’s capital, Diwaniyah, residents of al-Kafi village (population 4,000), where the new death occurred, complained about poor public infrastructure and health services and called for immediate help.

Dependent on river water

“Municipality and health services are not available and we totally depend on the river to get our drinking water. The river, which we share with animals, has caused about 20 cholera cases in our village,” said Sheik Jawad Kadhim Diwan, a tribal leader.

“We call upon the government and the presidential council to save the lives of these people by supplying us with safe drinking water, and to start infrastructure projects as a matter of urgency,” Diwan added.

According to Richard Finkelstein, co-author of Medical Microbiology, the disease occurs primarily during summer, possibly reflecting the increased presence of the organism in the marine environment during these months, as well as the enhanced opportunity for it to multiply in unrefrigerated foods.

The Iraqi Health Ministry and the World Health Organization have blamed the country's rundown water and sanitation infrastructure for the outbreak.

Cholera is a gastro-intestinal disease typically spread by contaminated water. It can cause severe diarrhoea, which in extreme cases can lead to fatal dehydration. Treating drinking water with chlorine and improving hygiene conditions can prevent the disease.

Further Information:

** Iraq: Health Ministry confirms cholera cases (3/09/2008)

** Iraq: Kurdistan bracing for possible cholera outbreak (7/05/2008)

** Iraq: an 'intolerable place for Children' the special representative of the secretary- general for children in armed conflicts (25/04/2008)

** Children's right to health resource page

** Children in Iraq resource page

Previous News release items


Organisation Contact Details:

IRIN News
http://www.irinnews.org

Last updated 06/10/2008 13:37:47

Please note that these reports are hosted by CRIN as a resource for Child Rights campaigners, researchers and other interested parties. Unless otherwise stated, they are not the work of CRIN and their inclusion in our database does not necessarily signify endorsement or agreement with their content by CRIN.

Have your sayHave your say!

Be the first to have your say! Do you have something to say about this item? Get it off your chest, by posting some feedback.

Click here to view feedback for all items.

RSS FeedRSS feed for this item