Hawking of food has been banned in Embu after two people died of
what is suspected to be cholera in two villages in Mbeere South
Sub-County.
The disease caused by poor sanitation and
hygiene has spread to 10 counties, with over 2,000 cases diagnosed since
the first outbreak was reported in December.
At the
weekend, a man aged about 60 and an eight-year-old girl died within
three days of each other in Gikuru and Kakawa villages after exhibiting
cholera-like symptoms.
A 35-year-old man and a woman
aged 55 were also admitted to Kimbimbi Sub-County hospital in Kirinyaga
County, while an 11-year old girl was Sunday recovering at Gategi Health
Centre in Mbeere South.
Results from samples sent to
the national public health laboratory are expected today to establish
whether the two are ailing from cholera or acute typhoid.
“The
situation is manageable and we are coping well. We are educating people
on the right hygiene to minimise such cases,” said Dr Philip Masaulo,
the Embu County director of health.
He said health
workers had increased surveillance and medicine had been sent to various
health centres in anticipation of increased cases of cholera. He asked
families to also boil drinking water.
STOP EATING IN GATHERINGS
“We urge people to stop eating in mass gatherings such as funerals and weddings.
"We are also asking neighbouring counties to follow suit because it is a shared problem,” said Dr Masaulo.
In Meru, the county government said it would work with other counties to curb the spread of cholera in the region.
The
county executive for Health, Dr William Muraah, said the neighbouring
Embu and Tharaka-Nithi counties had been singled out in the
collaboration to undertake preventive and curative measures to stop the
spread of the disease.
“I have already instructed the public health officers to crack down on all unclean restaurants, food kiosks and food hawkers.
"We also have enough medical supplies to deal with any eventuality, even in the neighbouring counties,” he said.
More
than 60 eateries have been closed for failing to meet health standards
while the county government has started a campaign in schools to spread
information about how to stop the disease, including boiling drinking
water, washing hands with soap and clean running water and not buying
food from hawkers.
FOUR DIE IN THIKA
In Thika, four people have died of cholera while 12 others are being treated.
The county executive for health, Dr Jonah Mwangi, said the four died in their homes at Kiandutu and Gachagi slums.
“We
have identified one positive case for cholera who is undergoing
treatment at Thika Level 5 hospital, while 12 others who have diarrhoea
have also been admitted and are being monitored,” he said during a free
cancer screening at the Thika Muslim Primary School.
He said the county had banned hawking of food, including roasted maize.
Other cases have been reported in Kabati area of Murang’a County where at least six people have died.
In
Migori, health officials are still on high alert despite a reduction in
new cholera cases in the county which was the hardest hit by the
disease.
Ten people died in the region from the disease in February and March.
“Our
teams are still on red alert because we are still getting reports of
outbreaks in Nakuru, Mombasa and Nairobi,” said Dr Donald Jaleny, the
county health department’s chief officer.
The outbreak occurred during a prolonged drought, which caused a water shortage.
Health
workers managed to contain the disease due to quick supply of drugs and
water treatment tablets beside outlawing eating in funerals and other
public gatherings.
“All our ward and sub-county
administrators were under firm instructions to ensure no feasting took
place in the villages until the time the ban was lifted,” said Mr Elijah
Odhiambo, the county executive committee member in charge of health.
The county also banned hawking of ready-to-eat food although many traders defied the ban.
Mobile treatment units were set up, especially on the boundary with Homa Bay while others were set up in churches.
The
Kenya Red Cross Society attributed the rapid spread of the disease to
contamination of River Riana and poor hygiene, especially among families
that do not use toilets.
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