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Africa Cholera Down But Still Dangerous: WHO


FILE: Woman drinking dose of the first oral vaccine against cholera in Africa during an epidemic, Guinea, Tougnifili/Mankountan, 2012. Photo by David Di Lorenzo/MSF.
FILE: Woman drinking dose of the first oral vaccine against cholera in Africa during an epidemic, Guinea, Tougnifili/Mankountan, 2012. Photo by David Di Lorenzo/MSF.

Cholera cases are falling across Africa, the World Health Organization said Thursday, but the number of deaths remains stable and heavy flooding is increasing the risk of the disease spreading.

The United Nations agency WHO said that 2,880 cases of cholera were recorded across the continent in the week ending on February 26 - a 37 percent decline compared to the previous week.

But the disease has kept claiming lives at a similar rate. Eighty-one cholera deaths were recorded during week ending on February 26, compared to 82 recorded the week before.

Several African countries are battling cholera outbreaks, with the southern African nation of Malawi suffering its worst ever epidemic.

Heavy rainfall in Malawi, as well as its neighbors South Africa and Zambia, is fueling the spread of the disease, the WHO said.

Medical teams face increased difficulties operating in areas where downpours have damaged roads and health infrastructure, for example.

In Madagascar, flooding caused by tropical cyclones this year have caused flooding and contributed to a spike in malaria cases, according to the WHO, while increasing the risk of a cholera outbreak.

Last month, the WHO warned that Africa was suffering from an exponential rise in cholera cases.

Cholera, which causes diarrhea and vomiting, is contracted from a bacterium that is generally transmitted through contaminated food or water.

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