BAGHDAD (IRIN) - The number of confirmed
cases of cholera has risen to 107 in central and southern parts of the
country, a Health Ministry spokesman said on 16 September.
"The number of confirmed cases has reached 107: Babil 64 cases,
Karbala 14, Baghdad 24, Najaf two, Diyala one, Basra one case and the
last case in Maysan," said Ihssan Jaafar, director-general of the
public health directorate and spokesman for the ministry's cholera
control unit.
Jaafar said Iraqi health authorities were still fighting the
outbreak on two fronts: offering medical treatment and raising
awareness among the population either by issuing posters or through
television programmes.
He said two kinds of medical treatments were used: oral
dehydration therapy - Dextrolyte - for the simple cases, especially for
children; while the intravenous one - Ringer Lacpate - involved
antibiotics.
"We don't have any shortages [of drugs] for these treatments and we can cope with any outbreak," he said.
Since the outbreak in late August, Iraqi health authorities have
been accusing each other of not doing enough to curb the spread of the
disease.
On 16 September, Zuhair al-Khafaji, head of the Environment
Department at Babil Health Directorate, said negligence by the service
authorities was to blame.
"It has been confirmed to us that the chloride, which was used
before in the water purification plants and which was of Iranian and
Indian origin, had expired. But now we are waiting for a new supply of
chloride from Amman, Jordan, which is better than the previous one,"
al-Khafaji said.
"The reason behind the daily increase in cases [of cholera] is
that many people still do not pay attention to health authorities'
directions and keep drinking from rivers without using water
[purification] tablets."
Cholera is a gastro-intestinal disease typically spread by
contaminated water. It can cause severe diarrhoea, which, in extreme
cases, can lead to fatal dehydration. It can be prevented by treating
drinking water with chlorine and by improving personal hygiene
conditions.
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