Focus on Cholera

MSF treated over 43,000 people for cholera in 2007 and has recently treated cholera patients in Ethiopia, Guinea, Sudan and Zimbabwe. 


MSF responds to a sever cholera outbreak in Guinea Bissau.

MSF responds to a sever cholera outbreak in Guinea Bissau.
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Cholera causes profuse diarrhoea and vomiting, and infected people can die of profound dehydration, sometimes within a matter of hours. It often breaks out when there is overcrowding and inadequate access to clean water, rubbish collection, and proper latrines. This situation can be especially problematic in rainy seasons when houses and latrines flood and contaminated water collects in stagnant pools.

Cholera is caused by infection with bacteria, which is excreted in faeces and vomit. The infection spreads when someone ingests the bacteria through contaminated food or water, or comes into contact with excretions from an infected person and does not wash their hands before eating or preparing food. Contamination of food or water supplies causes massive outbreaks in a short period of time.

The bacteria causes the cells lining the intestine to secrete huge amounts of fluid and this leads to profuse diarrhoea and vomiting. A patient undergoing treatment can lose over 50 litres of fluid during a bout of cholera. Untreated, an infected person will die of dehydration well before this and this can take only a couple of hours.

The most effective way to prevent the spread of infection is to interrupt the contamination cycle through the provision of safe water and soap and educating people on washing hands, disposing of faeces, pit latrines and protecting water stocks. Because of this, MSF water and sanitation engineers and logisticians have a vital role to play.

MSF has developed cholera treatment kits to provide rapid assistance and sets up cholera treatment centres in areas where there are outbreaks. Cholera is treatable and in many situations, MSF teams are able to limit the case fatality rate to less than 1%.

 

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                                                                                    In the field, MSF doctors are constantly frustrated by the lack of adequate medical tools. In response, Médecins Sans Frontières set up the MSF Access Campaign in 1999 to improve access to existing medical tools and to stimulate the development of urgently needed better tools. Campaign for Acces to essential medecins. 

 

 

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MSF is well known for its humanitarian medical work, but it has also produced important research based on its field experience with vulnerable populations. This website archives MSF's scientific articles and makes them available free, with full text, and in an easily searchable format. MSF Field Research website.

 

 

 

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For 30 years, MSF has directly witnessed the human cost of the lack of drugs for neglected diseases and has raised its voice against this inequity. In 2003, seven organisations from around the world joined forces to establish DNDi, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative

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1:03 AM, Fri Sep 03, 2010