Typhoid outbreak hits eastern Syria
2013-02-19 15:06
-
Syria
Options and Implications for Lebanon and the Region
Now R196.00
buy now
Geneva - Typhoid has broken out in an opposition-held
region of Syria due to people drinking contaminated water from the Euphrates
River, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Tuesday.
An estimated 2 500 people in north-eastern Deir al-Zor
province are infected with the contagious disease, which causes diarrhoea and
can be fatal, the UN agency said.
"There is not enough fuel or electricity to run the
pumps so people drink water from the Euphrates that is contaminated, probably
with sewage," the WHO representative in Syria, Elisabeth Hoff, told
Reuters by telephone.
WHO had no confirmed reports of deaths so far from
typhoid.
Typhoid fever is an infection of the intestinal tract and
bloodstream caused by salmonella bacteria. People become infected after
consuming food or beverages handled by an infected person or by drinking
contaminated water.
Symptoms can be treated with antibiotics or vaccines but
some strains can kill, Hoff said.
Hepatitis A, another water-borne disease that can cause epidemics,
is also spreading in areas such as Aleppo and Idlib as well as in crowded
shelters for displaced people in Damascus.
"This is typical when you see water and sanitation
systems totally break down. Between 50 and 70 people share toilets in many
shelters in Damascus," Hoff said.
Humanitarian forum
As Deir al-Zor is in rebel hands, Syrian government
health authorities cannot access the area but the WHO has relied on local aid
groups to bring in medical supplies, Hoff said.
"The people in charge [the rebels] need to start
doing something in the areas they are controlling," she added.
Leishmaniasis, a tropical disease transmitted by
sand-flies that causes skin ulcers resembling leprosy, is spreading in Syria
and there are now 14 000 cases in Hassakah province in the northeast, according
to the WHO.
"It is a very high number and spreading with the
movement of people. Internally displaced from Aleppo have brought it to
Tartous," Hoff said.
The UN is hosting a Syria Humanitarian Forum in Geneva on
Tuesday, attended by senior aid officials from UN agencies, the EU and other
humanitarian groups.
The Syrian government has approved the deployment of
three further international aid groups, UN spokesperson Jens Laerke told a news
briefing on Tuesday.
Eight international non-governmental organisations have
been allowed to operate to date.
Syria's ambassador to the UN in Geneva normally attends
the talks but rebel representatives are not invited.
Valerie Amos, UN humanitarian co-ordinator who is hosting
the forum met Suhair al-Atassi, a vice president of the opposition National
Coalition of Syria, on Monday in the Swiss city, Laerke said.
"We are meeting with them like any other partner
engaged in the humanitarian response in Syria. They have been discussing
various issues in relation to the humanitarian response in Syria," he told
Reuters.