Epidemic and pandemic-prone diseases | Outbreaks | Cholera | Outbreak update – Cholera in Sudan, 14 December 2019

Outbreak update – Cholera in Sudan, 14 December 2019

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17 December 2019 – The Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) of Sudan reported three new suspected case of cholera during epidemiological week 50 (8–14 December) of 2019. The cumulative number of reported cases since the declaration of the cholera outbreak on 8 September 2019 is 344 including 11 associated deaths, giving a case fatality rate of 3.2%. The attack rate was 0.6 per 10 000 population. Among all reported cases, 9% were children under five years of age and 61% were female. The most affected age groups were 45 years and above (29.8%) followed by those between 15 and 29.9 years of age (26.8%). Of the total number of cases, 98% were reported among unvaccinated people and only 2% were reported among those vaccinated.

The outbreak started on 28 August 2019 in the El Roseries locality of Blue Nile state (BN) before rapidly spreading to other localities of BN as well as spilling over into Sennar state. On 8 September 2019, the FMoH officially declared a cholera outbreak in BN state. Currently, there are 15 affected localities in the four states of BN, Sennar, Khartoum and Al Jazirah. The highest reporting state was BN (204 cases) followed by Sennar (129 cases).

Of a total of 58 samples collected, 33 tested positive (by culture) for Vibrio cholerae at the National Public Health Laboratory of Sudan.

An oral cholera vaccine (OCV) campaign was implemented by the FMoH to contain the outbreak with the support of WHO, UNICEF and other partners. The campaign was implemented over five days on 12–16 October 2019. It targeted a total of 1.65 million people (one year and older) in BN and Sennar states. The campaign achieved 97.5% coverage in Sennar and 85% in BN. A second OCV campaign was completed during week 47 in BN and Sennar state.

WHO continues to provide leadership and support as it implements activities with health authorities and partners to respond to this ongoing cholera outbreak, including case management; surveillance and laboratory investigations; hotspot mapping and OCV campaign planning; water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH); and risk communications.

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