South Sudan: MSF Treats 3,300 Cases of Cholera, Immunizes 200,000

Monica Burns/MSF

 

A significant decline in the number of new cholera cases in South Sudan in recent weeks has prompted Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to scale down its cholera operations. Instead it will redirect resources towards other unmet health needs in the country, where more than 1.7 million people have been displaced by the ongoing conflict.

Since the cholera outbreak was declared on May 15, MSF teams have provided treatment to 3,300 patients in the capital, Juba; in Torit in Eastern Equatoria state; and in Wau Shiluk in Upper Nile state. This is more than half of the 5,561 total cholera cases officially recorded countrywide in the current outbreak.

MSF teams responded to the outbreak by rapidly constructing treatment centers in Juba and setting up oral rehydration points across the city and in other affected locations. At the same time, MSF worked closely with South Sudanese authorities and other partners to improve people’s access to safe drinking water and to train health staff in dealing with the outbreak.

At first the disease spread quickly, exacerbated by unsanitary and overcrowded conditions in the camps where people were sheltering. “Deteriorating living conditions for hundreds of thousands of people, combined with the lack of functioning health facilities, created a perfect storm for the spread of the disease earlier this year,” says Brian Moller, MSF’s head of mission in South Sudan.

The recent decline in the number of new cases of cholera suggests that the outbreak is now under control. “While MSF will remain vigilant, it looks like the efforts of the Ministry of Health and other organizations, including MSF, have helped bring the epidemic under control,” says Moller.

As part of its cholera response, MSF teams carried out the first mass cholera vaccination campaigns ever done in South Sudan, immunizing a total of 200,000 displaced people and host families in Malakal, Minkaman, and Juba against the disease. MSF teams also vaccinated a further 150,000 South Sudanese refugees in Gambella camp, Ethiopia, to prevent the outbreak spreading beyond South Sudan’s borders.

Cholera vaccinations provide vulnerable communities with a better chance of avoiding an outbreak. While the vaccination itself only provides an estimated 65 percent chance of protection, it is one of a number of measures that can help reduce the spread of the disease, alongside improving people’s living conditions and ensuring they have proper sanitation and clean drinking water.

Over its 40 years of existence, MSF has developed significant expertise in the management of cholera. Cholera is endemic in South Sudan but is easily treatable if tackled early. While MSF is reducing its cholera response in South Sudan, ongoing health promotion and community awareness activities will be essential to prevent a recurrence of the disease.

After fighting broke out in Juba on December 15, 2013, and subsequently in several other South Sudanese states, MSF increased its capacity to rapidly respond to emergency medical needs in the country. More than 3,800 MSF staff now run 26 medical and non-medical programs, as well as outreach activities, in nine of South Sudan’s ten states, providing basic health care, nutritional support, surgery, vaccinations, and clean drinking water to people who have fled their homes.

MSF is committed to providing lifesaving medical care in South Sudan, offering aid to people affected by the current crisis as well as to many others who are vulnerable due to lack of access to health care in the country and within the region. In Kenya, Ethiopia, and Uganda, MSF has set up emergency projects to provide assistance to thousands of South Sudanese who have taken refuge across the borders.

MSF has conducted a mass immunisation campaign in Ethiopia’s Gambella region, against the risk of cholera spreading across the border from neighbouring South Sudan. In the first round of the campaign (end of July) 151,723 people - South Sudanese refugees living in camps and transit centres and the host community - were vaccinated against cholera. The second round started mid-August.
Monica Burns/MSF