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Cholera ebbing in Sierra Leone

Only one patient was in the cholera ward of Freetown’s Connaught Hospital on 3 October 2012. Aid groups and the government rallied to combat Sierra Leone’s worst cholera epidemic in 15 years Otto Bakano/IRIN
Only one patient was in the cholera ward of Freetown’s Connaught Hospital on 3 October 2012. Aid groups and the government rallied to combat Sierra Leone’s worst cholera epidemic in 15 years

Sierra Leone’s worst cholera outbreak in 15 years has eased in the past two months and new infections each week have recently dipped to below 1,000.

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Some 841 new cases were reported in the first week of October. The figure fell to 433 the following week, according to data from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization. Although the decline began in late August, reported cases were still above 1,000 per week at that time.

Since February when the outbreak started, 21,815 people have been infected and 292 others killed. Heavy rains in August accelerated the spread of the disease, which infected people in 12 of Sierra Leone’s 13 districts.

Moira Fratta, UNICEF’s emergency specialist in Sierra Leone, told IRIN the outbreak is expected to last for some weeks to come.

“We are starting to think of how to work for preparedness for next year. We hope that it will not happen, but there could be an outbreak.”

Improving the quality and availability of water, hygiene and health care are important if cholera is to be eradicated in Sierra Leone, a country emerging from the devastation of the 1991-2002 civil war.

This IRIN slideshow looks at the living conditions of those worst affected by the cholera epidemic.

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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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