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Urban bilharzia infection spreading

Hiol Cyrille studied business management but is now part of an association of youth who raise pigs. David Hecht/IRIN

Medical officials in Cameroon say bilharzia, a waterborne larvae which causes life-threatening internal damage if left untreated, has been found in Yaounde.

“We found that 32 percent of the inhabitants of Mballa I-Dragage, a very high class residential area minutes from the centre of Yaounde, are infected with bilharzia,” said Louis-Albert Tchuem Tchuenté, president of the national programme against bilharzia (PNLSHI).

“We never imagined that it would spread to such a high-class area – it is very worrying,” he said. “Urban bilharzia must not be ignored.”

According to PNLSHI, bilharzia infections has existed in Yaounde since at least 2006. The larvae is spread by bathing or swimming in polluted water, but is mainly found in rural and informal areas where sanitation facilities are poorest.

“There are many factors favouring the spread of this illness in Yaounde,” Tchuem Tchuenté said.

Other common means of transmission are poor maintenance of water and sanitation infrastructure, informal settlements in the city mixing with formal settlements, and people moving to the city from the countryside, he said.

“Most infected people are still ignorant about this disease, Tchuem Tchuenté said, adding that education campaigns in the Loum region in western Cameroon had cut infection rates from 63 percent in 2000 to 3 percent in 2007.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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