Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases
Cholera outbreak creeps closer to Haiti's capital
By JACOB KUSHNER
The Associated Press
Saturday, October 23, 2010; 6:02 PM
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- A spreading cholera outbreak in rural Haiti
threatened to outpace aid groups as they stepped up efforts Saturday
hoping to keep the disease from reaching the squalid camps of
earthquake survivors in Port-au-Prince.
Health officials said at least 220 people had died and 2,394 others
were infected in an outbreak mostly centered in the Artibonite region
north of the capital.
But the number of cases in towns near Port-au-Prince were rising, and
officials worried the next target will be hundreds of thousands of
Haitians left homeless by January's devastating quake and now living in
camps across the capital.
"If the epidemic makes its way to Port-au-Prince, where children and
families are living in unsanitary, overcrowded camps, the results could
be disastrous," said Dr. Estrella Serrano, World Vision's emergency
response health and nutrition manager.
Officials confirmed at least five cholera cases in Arcahaie, a town
close to Port-au-Prince, and four cases in Limbe, a small northern
municipality. Ten cases were reported in Gonaives, the largest city in
the Artibonite, according to Partners in Health, a U.S.-based
humanitarian group.
The sick included 50 inmates at a prison in Mirebalais, just north of
Port-au-Prince, Health Ministry director Gabriel Thimothe said.
Experts also were investigating possible cases in Croix-des-Bouquet, a
suburb of the capital that could act as a transfer point of the disease
because it has a widely used bus station, said Paul Namphy with Haiti's
national water agency.
"This is a very mobile country," he said. "It can spread like wildfire."
Reports trickled in of patients seeking treatment in clinics closer to
Port-au-Prince because the St. Nicholas hospital in the seaside city of
St. Marc is overflowing, said Margaret Aguirre, an International
Medical Corps spokeswoman.
One doctor in the capital reported that a 6-year-old girl from
Port-au-Prince's southern Carrefour district tested positive for
cholera, although government health officials were investigating and
had not confirmed the case.
"The child was in very weak condition," Dr. Willy Lafond Edwight told
The Associated Press. "She couldn't stand up. She couldn't even talk.
... I guarantee that if you find one case, many more cases will appear."
Cholera is a waterborne bacterial infection, and the water agency was
nearly doubling the amount of chlorine in drinking water.
Aid groups are providing soap and water purification tablets and
educating people in Port-au-Prince about the importance of washing
hands.
The groups also began training more staff about cholera and where to
direct people with symptoms. Cholera had not been seen in Haiti for
decades, and many people don't know about the disease, which causes
severe diarrhea and vomiting that can lead to dehydration and death
within hours.
Red Cross spokeswoman Julie Sell said teams would begin teaching people
in refugee camps how to prevent cholera starting Monday - five days
after the outbreak.
"We are taking this very seriously, but we also want to make sure that
every one of our people have the information they need," she said.
The International Organization for Migration also was training staff
before sending 64 workers out to camps Monday, spokeswoman Sabina
Carlson said. But she said the group had begun sending text messages
about how cholera spreads and how it can be prevented.
"It's a very new disease in Haiti," she said. "We need to make sure
that we've got all the information in order."
Partners in Health also said it would give its health workers
additional training Monday before they fan out in Port-au-Prince.
But humanitarian groups can do only so much, said Melody Munz,
environmental health coordinator for the International Rescue Committee.
"We can provide soap, and we can provide chlorine. The thing is to get
the community to participate," she said.
Mark Schuller, a human rights worker for International Action Ties,
said he and others had been meeting with people at camps since Friday
and were worried that many had not received information about the
outbreak.
"Everyone I'm talking to is saying they haven't heard from a single NGO
or government official," he said. "A lot of people don't even know that
there's a cholera epidemic."
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Associated Press writers Evens Sanon in Port-au-Prince and Danica Coto
in San Juan, Puerto Rico, contributed to this report.