An outbreak of cholera in Kenya poses a high risk to the region and a moderate threat globally, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said, after delegates at two international conferences were hit.
Polity reports that the spread of the disease has surged since April, affecting the capital Nairobi, a major hub for conferences in Africa, and the large refugee camps of Dadaab and Kakuma.
The disease, which is spread by ingesting faecal matter, hit 146 at a conference in Nairobi on 22 June, and a further 136 people at the China Trade Fair on 10-12 July, one of whom died.
The report says in total, the disease, which causes acute watery diarrhoea and can kill within hours if not treated, registered 1,216 suspected cases and 14 deaths between the start of the year and July 17.
"The risk of the current outbreak is assessed as high at national and regional levels and moderate at global level," WHO said in a disease outbreak news item. Cholera is reported in Kenya every year but large cyclical epidemics normally come every five to seven years, it said.
[link url="http://www.polity.org.za/article/who-sees-high-risk-from-kenya-cholera-outbreak-2017-07-21"]Polity report[/link]
[link url="http://www.who.int/csr/don/21-july-2017-cholera-kenya/en/"]WHO report[/link]