A nurse vaccinates a child during a vaccination campaign by Doctors
Without Borders (MSF) against measles near Mpoko airport in Bangui on
January 8, 2014. PHOTO | ERIC FEFERBERG
AFP
A medical charity organisation is
warning of a possible outbreak of measles in the region following the
flight of people from South Sudan suspected to be carrying the virus.
Doctors
Without Borders (MSF) in its latest dispatch on the South Sudan
situation warns that an increasing percentage of refugees in Kenya,
Uganda and Ethiopia have shown symptoms of infection even though only
seven cases have been isolated.
Guilhem Molinie, MSF’s
head of mission in Kenya on Monday said at least 22 percent of the more
than 10,000 refugees hosted at Kenya’s Nadapal camp have “upper
respiratory tract infections” and another 11 per cent have “lower
respiratory tract infections”.
“With cases of measles
reported at the camps in Juba, where most of these refugees transited
through, it is of the utmost importance that we do all that we can to
prevent an outbreak in Kenya,” he said.
HIGHLY CONTAGIOUS
According
to the World Health Organisation (WHO), measles is a contagious disease
that causes fever and patients often feel like they like they have cold
with cough, high fever, runny nose, and red, watery eyes as common
symptoms.
WHO reports that the virus that causes
measles often resides in in the nose and throat of infected people and
can be spread to others when hosts sneeze, cough or even talk.
In Kenya, children under five are generally vaccinated although the vaccine cannot be administered for infants below 12 months.
The
charity which is working with Kenya’s Ministry of Health to screen
refugees arriving at Nadapal said it has focused more on measles after
seven people tested positive.
On Friday, MSF said it
had screened 6,000 people, and vaccinated more than 2,863 children
against measles and polio. The agency said the seven cases had been
referred to the local hospital for treatment.
The UN
had estimated that about 1,000 South Sudanese have been fleeing their
homeland every day into Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia since the country
fell into chaos on December 15. Uganda is now hosting 46,000 and MSF
reported that “we are treating serious cases of malaria, diarrhoea, and
respiratory tract infections”. (READ: South Sudan refugees overwhelm Uganda aid workers)
But it is hoped that a recent ceasefire deal between South Sudanese government and the rebels would lower this number. (READ: South Sudan ceasefire 'shaky': Norwegian minister)
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