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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
To: "Jean-Francois Darcq" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, September 29, 2011 1:31:24 PM GMT-0000
Subject: KENYA: Medics overwhelmed as dengue fever spreads

KENYA: Medics overwhelmed as dengue fever spreads

MANDERA, 29 September 2011 (IRIN) - An outbreak of dengue fever in Mandera, 
northeastern Kenya, is spreading fast, with at least 5,000 people infected 
within weeks, due to limited health facilities, a shortage of medical personnel 
and poor sanitation, officials told IRIN. 
 
 With only one public hospital and a few private clinics, medical officials in 
the town - which borders Ethiopia and Somalia - said the facilities were 
congested with dengue fever patients and they were unable to cope. 
 
 "Mandera District Hospital is congested, many patients and panicked residents 
are streaming into the facility, it's the only public hospital, all wards are 
occupied above capacity," Mohamed Sheikh, the provincial public health and 
medical officer, told IRIN. "At the moment, more than 5,000 cases have been 
recorded, and a large number of other cases - about half of those attending 
Mandera government hospital - have been treated in the few private clinics." 
 
 The UN World Health Organization (WHO) describes dengue as "a mosquito-borne 
infection that causes a severe flu-like illness, and sometimes a potentially 
lethal complication called dengue haemorrhagic fever". The WHO estimates some 
50 million people are infected with dengue across the world every year. 
 
 A statement by the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation on 26 September 
said four deaths from the disease had been confirmed but, according to Mandera 
residents, at least 10 people have died since early September when the outbreak 
started. 
 
 Sheikh said more deaths resulting from the viral infection could have occurred 
in homes or at private clinics. 
 
 "Symptoms of dengue fever case are easily mistaken for malaria and 
anti-malaria drugs were prescribed to many suspected patients for two weeks, 
then we got concerned when we received more cases, conducted tests last week 
and confirmed almost all our patients required new treatment for this viral 
infection," Sheikh said. 
 
 In the absence of a specific treatment for dengue fever, Sheikh said, health 
facilities were providing supportive treatment to the infected: Paracetamol for 
those presenting with fever, fluids for those dehydrated and antibiotics for 
those with infections. He added that the fever often subsides after seven days. 
 
 Sheikh said the disease was believed to have spread from neighbouring Somalia 
where several deaths and cases have been reported this year. 
 
 He said health workers had been mobilized to help in treatment and to tackle 
poor sanitation, which provides an ideal breeding ground for mosquitoes, the 
disease's vectors. 
 
 "Elimination of mosquitoes by chemical spraying is the surest, [most] reliable 
approach to eliminate the spread of dengue fever; it's easily contracted from a 
single bite, mosquito nets cannot guarantee full prevention," Sheikh said. 
 
 A community nurse at the Mandera District Hospital, who requested anonymity, 
said more than 100 patients were spending nights in the hospital's compound 
while hundreds more were unable to access treatment as they could not pay the 
fees charged for diagnosis, treatment and admission. 
 
 "Many people are suffering at home, some have died; five cases known to me are 
from poor families, the government should consider this a disaster and waive 
all fees," the nurse said. 
 
 Severe drought 
 
 Abridirizak Dualle, programme manager of the Rural Agency for Community 
Development and Assistance (RACIDA), an NGO, said the outbreak had affected 
almost 75 percent of the residents of Mandera, who were already struggling to 
cope with severe drought. 
 
 Dualle said small businesses and subsistence farming along Dawa River - which 
runs through the town - as well as school attendance had been affected. 
 
 "I have just recovered from dengue fever and returned to work to find that 
eight of my colleagues who were working on a number of drought mitigation 
projects are all at home sick; almost all families in Mandera central are 
either sick or affected," Dualle said. 
 
 Ibrahim Maalim, a local leader, urged the government to quickly establish 
mobile clinics at Buruburu, Township, Tawakal and Kamor, the worst-hit areas of 
Mandera. 
 
 Abdi Mohamud, the Mandera central zone education officer, said a crisis 
meeting was convened on 26 September following reports that parents were 
withdrawing their children from school for fear they would contract the fever. 
 
 "Five teachers from this zone have contracted dengue fever; they are unable to 
work. I have yet to find out how many children are affected," Mohamud told 
IRIN. 
 
 A teacher at Mandera Township Primary School said only three out of 22 
teachers had reported to work while more than half the school population of 
1,900 pupils had not turned up. 
 
 "The matter is very serious, fewer than 900 pupils attended classes today. In 
one class 20 out of 84 pupils were present; not all are sick, some are 
assisting sick relatives," said the teacher, himself just recovered from the 
disease. 
 
 na/js/mw 
 
 
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93848



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