Cholera in Mayotte: a scourge on the rise | TV5MONDE

Cholera in Mayotte: a scourge on the rise | TV5MONDE
Cholera in Mayotte: a scourge on the rise | TV5MONDE

An infectious disease that can be devastating, cholera, which is currently hitting Mayotte, is a scourge that is on the rise throughout the world, primarily affecting poor countries and war zones.

Outbreak in Mayotte

In the French department of Mayotte, located in the Indian Ocean, 37 cases of cholera have been identified as of May 1 and a vaccination campaign is underway with more than 2,600 people vaccinated to date, according to the Regional Agency. health.

This outbreak comes as a major epidemic is underway in the neighboring archipelago of the Comoros where there have been more than 60 deaths and more than 2,500 cases since the start of the year.

In mainland , this disease has become very rare and mainly reported by travelers returning from infected countries or areas: there have been on average zero to two cases per year since the beginning of the 2000s, according to the Ministry of Health.

We have to go back to 1986 to find traces of an outbreak in mainland France, mainly from cases imported from North Africa, with more than thirty cases and a 10-year-old child dying after a stay in Algeria.

Global explosion in the number of cases

As a result of climate change and the increase in conflicts, the number of cholera cases is currently exploding around the world, underlines the World Health Organization (WHO).

Reported cases (only a portion of proven cases) more than doubled between 2021 and 2022 to reach 473,000, then climbed further to more than 700,000 in 2023.

Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Ethiopia, Mozambique, Somalia, Zambia and Zimbabwe are among the most severely affected countries currently, says the WHO.

Acute intestinal infection

An acute diarrheal infection, cholera is caused by the absorption of food or water contaminated by a bacteria, the bacillus vibrio cholerae or cholera vibrio.

Three-quarters of infected people express no symptoms.

But when it manifests, the disease can be formidable for 10 to 20% of cases, with severe diarrhea and vomiting which cause accelerated dehydration.

If left untreated, cholera is one of the most rapidly fatal infectious diseases: death can occur within one to three days.

Only rapid treatment by infusion, with the administration of rehydration salts and antibiotics, can prevent death.

Poverty and conflict marker

Haiti, Syria or the DRC: the list of recent cholera outbreaks shows how this disease is a marker of poverty, instability and armed conflicts.

“There is a close link between the transmission of cholera and inadequate access to drinking water and sanitation facilities” underlines the WHO.

Places at risk of epidemics are typically refugee camps: humanitarian crises with the displacement of populations and difficulties in accessing drinking water considerably increase the risks.

Favored by climate change

Climate change, by increasing the intensity and frequency of floods, cyclones and droughts, disrupts access to drinking water and “creates an ideal environment for the development of cholera”, according to the WHO.

Recent example: cases of cholera in Mozambique increased tenfold after the passage of Cyclone Freddy which, at the beginning of 2023, deprived some of the inhabitants of portable water.

Insufficient vaccines

Several oral vaccines have been developed and are recommended by the WHO for areas where cholera is endemic and during epidemics.

But the multiplication of outbreaks has dangerously limited stocks and forced humanitarian organizations to reduce the number of doses administered during vaccination campaigns.

In April, the WHO gave the green light to the simplified version of a vaccine, produced by the South Korean group EuBiologics, to accelerate production and replenish global stocks of anticholera serums.

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