World Health Organisation (WHO) has expressed concern over the persistence of cholera cases around the world, with 40,900 cases and 775 deaths reported in January.
A report made available on Monday by the WHO said that the cases were from 17 countries across four regions.
It stated that “the regions are the African Region, the Eastern Mediterranean Region, the Region of the Americas, and the South-East Asia Region.
“Zambia and Zimbabwe have experienced the highest surges, underscoring the ongoing challenge of controlling cholera and the importance of sustained public health efforts.
“In 2023, cases were reported in 30 countries across five WHO regions, including nine countries that recorded more than 10,000 cases.”
According to the report, the shortage of Oral Cholera Vaccines (OCV) has continued to affect global response to tackle the disease.
It stated that “from January 2023 to January 2024, urgent requests for OCV surged, with 76 million OCV doses requested by 14 countries, while only 38 million doses were available during that period.”
The WHO report added that the global stockpile of vaccines was awaiting replenishment, and all production up until March 8 would be allocated to requests already approved.
It classified the global resurgence of cholera as a grade 3 emergency in January 2023, the highest internal level for emergencies.
It said that based on the number of outbreaks and their geographic expansion, alongside the shortage of vaccines and other resources, WHO has continued to assess the risk at a global level. (NAN)
Disclaimer
Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of Vanguard newspapers or any employee thereof.