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Disease outbreak hits southern Sudan
An outbreak of a parasitic tropical disease has killed more than 300 people in southern Sudan - and the worst of the health crisis is yet to come, officials say.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the outbreak of kala azar, which began in September 2009 and has intensified in recent months, is the biggest health problem facing southern Sudan.
More than 7,000 cases - many of them in the region's most remote and insecure areas - have been reported this year by WHO and southern Sudanese health authorities. The outbreak of cases is the region's worst since 1991. More than 300 people have died since September 2009, WHO says, but officials fear the disease could spread for several more months.
"We don't know when it will end," said Dr Abdinasir Abubakar, a WHO medical officer in southern Sudan, said in an interview this week. Health officials, he said, are "struggling to respond to the outbreak because it is beyond what we had planned."
Transmitted through sand flies, the parasite that causes the contagious disease mainly affects children whose immune systems are compromised by malnutrition. In the recent outbreak, 90 percent of patients were children under the age of 17.
Nine out of 10 patients with kala azar will die if they do not receive treatment, according to Doctors Without Borders. Patients can die within weeks if not treated.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the outbreak of kala azar, which began in September 2009 and has intensified in recent months, is the biggest health problem facing southern Sudan.
More than 7,000 cases - many of them in the region's most remote and insecure areas - have been reported this year by WHO and southern Sudanese health authorities. The outbreak of cases is the region's worst since 1991. More than 300 people have died since September 2009, WHO says, but officials fear the disease could spread for several more months.
"We don't know when it will end," said Dr Abdinasir Abubakar, a WHO medical officer in southern Sudan, said in an interview this week. Health officials, he said, are "struggling to respond to the outbreak because it is beyond what we had planned."
Transmitted through sand flies, the parasite that causes the contagious disease mainly affects children whose immune systems are compromised by malnutrition. In the recent outbreak, 90 percent of patients were children under the age of 17.
Nine out of 10 patients with kala azar will die if they do not receive treatment, according to Doctors Without Borders. Patients can die within weeks if not treated.
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