United
Nations, Oct 7: The United Nations health agency is rapidly scaling up its
response to a plague outbreak in Madagascar that has spread to the capital and
port towns, infecting more than 100 people in just a few weeks. “WHO is
concerned that plague could spread further because it is already present in
several cities and this is the start of the epidemic season, which usually runs
from September to April,” said Charlotte Ndiaye, the World Health Organisation
(WHO) Representative in Madagascar in a news update, said a press release
yesterday by the UN News Centre here. Plague is a disease of poverty. It
thrives in places with poor sanitary conditions and inadequate health services.
It can kill quickly if left untreated, but can also be cured by common
antibiotics if delivered early, according to WHO. The Government of Madagascar
has confirmed that the death of a Seychellois basketball coach visiting the
nation for a sports event was due to pneumonic plague. He died in the hospital
in Antananarivo on 27 September. Health authorities are tracing people with
whom he came in contact, thus exposing them, to administer antibiotics as a
precautionary measure to prevent infection. The incident brings the total
number of dead to 21 since the outbreak was identified in late August while at least
114 others have been infected. “Our teams are on the ground in Madagascar
providing technical guidance, conducting assessments, supporting disease
surveillance and engaging with communities,” Dr Ndiaye explained. Further
deployments of WHO staff and response partners in the Global Outbreak Alert and
Response Network are underway, as well as increased supplies of antibiotics,
personal protective equipment and other supplies. “We are doing everything we
can to support the Government’s efforts, including by coordinating health
actors,” she added. The Malagasy Red Cross is also scaling-up community
surveillance, contact tracing and communication in to stem the spread as it
points out that the bubonic plague bacterium can travel to a person’s lungs,
causing pneumonic plague, which can spread quickly from person to person
through droplets in the air. WHO has released $300,000 in emergency funds, as
well as critical medical supplies, to quickly scale up operational efforts, and
is appealing for $1.5 million to support the response. Plague is endemic to
Madagascar, where around 400 cases of – mostly bubonic – plague are reported
annually. Contrary to past outbreaks, this one is affecting large urban areas,
which increases the risk of transmission. The number of cases identified to
date is higher than expected for this time of year. Bubonic plague is spread by
infected rats via flea bite while pneumonic is transmitted person-to-person.
The current outbreak includes both forms of plague. Nearly half of the cases identified
so far are of pneumonic plague. The last reported outbreak in December 2016 was
mainly bubonic plague occurring in remote area. UNI
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