Yemen: MSF calls for increased response to cholera outbreak

Sana’a, Yemen – Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in Yemen are receiving and treating a growing number of cholera and acute watery diarrhoea patients in the governorates of Amran, Hajja, Al-Dhale’, Taiz, and Ibb. The number of patients has drastically increased over the past two weeks, reaching a total of more than 780 cases since 30 March.

Following this new cholera outbreak, MSF has set up cholera treatment centres within five hospitals to isolate and treat patients presenting symptoms and is supporting other structures run by health authorities.

Since the end of April, MSF teams have treated 276 patients with cholera and acute watery diarrhoea at Al-Nasr Hospital and Al Salam Primary Health Care Centre, in Al-Dhale’ governorate. Since 30 March, MSF has treated 263 patients in the Abs Hospital, Hajja governorate, 168 of whom were received in the last two weeks. Al-Salam Hospital in the Amran governorate, Thi As Sufal General Rural Hospital in Ibb governorate and Mother & Child hospital in Al-Houban, Taiz governorate, also collectively received hundreds of patients in recent weeks.

The Yemeni Ministry of Public Health and Population has also reported about 310 cases in Sana’a.

 

An Infographic with MSF operations around the cholera outbreak.

 

Since the beginning of the current war in March 2015, many hospitals have stopped working due to the conflict. Access to healthcare has become very difficult for millions of people in Yemen. In addition, a number of health facilities have stopped functioning due to the lack of operating budget and salaries for staff since September 2016. With the severely weakened Yemeni health system, MSF fears that health authorities alone will not be able to deal with the outbreak.

“We have patients coming from many different districts, tens of kilometres away”, said Shinjiro Murata, MSF’s head of mission in Yemen. “We are very concerned that the disease will continue to spread and become out of control. A smooth collaboration between health actors and relevant authorities is needed to provide prompt support to health facilities and local communities directly in the affected areas. Humanitarian assistance also needs to be urgently scaled up to limit the spread of the outbreak and anticipate potential other ones.”


MSF is an international medical humanitarian organisation working in nearly 70 countries in the world, including Yemen. In Yemen, MSF teams are directly providing healthcare to patients in 13 hospitals and supporting more than 25 hospitals in 11 Yemeni governorates.



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