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Suspected diphtheria cases in Yemen near 500 — WHO

By Reuters - Jan 04,2018 - Last updated at Jan 04,2018

Nahla Arishi, a pediatrician, checks a boy infected with diphtheria at Al Sadaqa teaching hospital in the southern port city of Aden, Yemen, December 18, 2017 (Reuters photo)

GENEVA — At least 471 people in Yemen are believed to have been infected with diphtheria, killing one in 10 of them since the outbreak began in mid-August, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday.

Yemen, one of the Arab world's poorest countries, is embroiled in a proxy war between the Houthi armed movement, allied with Iran, and a US-backed military coalition headed by Saudi Arabia. 

The United Nations calls Yemen the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with 8 million people on the brink of famine.

Ibb and Al Hodeidah governorates are the hardest hit by diphtheria, spread through close physical and respiratory contact, WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said in response to a query.

"The overall case fatality ratio is 10 per cent," he said, noting that 46 fatalities had been recorded as of January 2.

The Saudi-led military coalition fighting in Yemen on Tuesday denied blocking aid and basic supplies from entering, following a Reuters story detailing how Yemen is struggling to cope with the diphtheria outbreak.

The Reuters Special Report, published on Dec 29, said that in the past four months, doctors across Yemen had recorded at least 380 cases of diphtheria, a bacterial disease that last appeared in the country in 1992.

The spread of diphtheria — which can be prevented by vaccine — compounds widespread hunger and one of the worst cholera outbreaks ever recorded, with more than 1 million cases and 2,227 deaths since April.

The WHO, a UN agency, has delivered antibiotics and vials of diphtheria antitoxin to affected areas and is helping establish treatment centres. 

Along with UNICEF, it has vaccinated children around Ibb against the disease. 

 

Yemen's health system has virtually collapsed, with chronic shortages of medical supplies, low immunisation rates and most health workers unpaid throughout the war. 

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