Ugandans: Add Kala azar to the many disease awaiting UPDF in the SUDAN!!!!


Matek

In a message dated 11/11/02 10:41:23 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< U N I T E D  N A T I O N S
 Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
 Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)
 
 SUDAN: Sharp rise in kala azar cases
 
 NAIROBI, 11 November (IRIN) - A dramatic increase in the potentially fatal 
liver disease, kala azar, is threatening southern communites already weakened 
by the country's 19-year civil war, the international organisation Medecins 
Sans Frontieres (MSF) warned. 
 
 "The state of these patients is appalling. They are being carried on 
stretchers for days to make it to the clinic. They look pale and thin and are 
extremely anaemic," Jose Antonio Bastos, MSF Operational Director, said in a 
statement on Friday.
 
 Kala azar, or visceral leishmaniasis, is a parasitic disease transmitted by 
the sandfly, which attacks the liver and the spleen causing fever and severe 
weight loss. The disease is very often fatal if left untreated.
 
 In Lankien, eastern Upper Nile, MSF said it had received over 100 kala azar 
admissions each week for the last six weeks, and in Malakal, also eastern 
Upper Nile, over 200 patients were currently being treated.
 
 Weakened by years of conflict, much of the southern population had been left 
"extremely vulnerable" to disease, and reports from neighbouring areas 
suggested that prevalence rates would be high there as well.
 
 Although the disease is endemic in parts of Sudan and usually peaks at this 
time of year, the current outbreak was at an "exceptional" level, and showed 
a dramatic increase compared to previous years, the statement said.
 
 "Insecurity, malnutrition and poor access to health care lower the people's 
natural resistance to diseases and make for an environment where outbreaks 
like the current one occur," Batsos said. "There is a clear overlap of those 
areas where kala azar is endemic and areas of conflict." 
 
 However, a cessation of hostilities agreement signed between the Sudanese 
government and the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) in 
October, prior to a resumption of peace talks, has paved the way for easing 
restrictions on humanitarian access in the south. 
  
 "The ceasefire agreement may mean that we can soon get into areas that we 
have not been able to reach until now," Bastos noted.
  >>

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