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Since May, a cholera outbreak in Nigeria’s Borno has killed 74 people and infected thousands.

Since May, a cholera outbreak in Nigeria’s Borno has killed 74 people and infected thousands.
Since May, a cholera outbreak in Nigeria’s Borno has killed 74 people and infected thousands.

Medecins Sans Frontieres, an aid group, said that a cholera outbreak in Nigeria's Borno state, which began in early May, has caused the death of at least 74 individuals and infected over 7,000 others, overwhelming local health facilities.

MSF reported 7,850 suspected cases across 14 local governments areas by June 7, citing data from the state health ministry. Infections were increasing 'dramatically each day,' according to MSF.

The outbreak strains an already fragile healthcare system in a area at the center of a 17 year Islamist insurgency. There are also problems with water and sanitation and mass displacement.

MSF has, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, set up a cholera-treatment centre in Maiduguri, the capital, to help support the response.

Bienfait Tombola is the MSF medical coordinator of the surge response for Maiduguri.

MSF reported that it had treated 7,439 patients on average, with 230 admissions a day. More than 500 cases were recorded just on June 5, the most since the response started.

The 'waterborne disease' cholera thrives in places without clean water or sanitation. MSF reported that authorities are planning a vaccination program, as the aid group continues to increase treatment, hygiene, and surveillance in order to contain the outbreak. (Reporting from Adewale Klawole, Maiduguri. Writing by Elisha B. Gbogbo. Editing by Alex Richardson.)

(source: Reuters)