UN Official Warns of Dengue Outbreak in Yemen’s Most Populated Governorate Taiz
Local Editor
The United Nations [UN] said on Monday that an outbreak of dengue fever in Yemen’s most populated governorate of Taiz has prompted urgent calls from the UN World Health Organization [WHO] for a safe, humanitarian corridor to reach over three million civilians trapped in the war-torn area.
According to the UN’s website on Monday, WHO is appealing for a safe corridor to reach more than 3 million people in war-torn Yemen’s most populated governorate, Taiz, where "an extreme spike" in cases of dengue fever has been recorded over the past two weeks.
"There is an urgent need for a humanitarian corridor to assess the situation and institute control measures," WHO’s Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, Dr. Ala Alwan, said.
With an estimated population of 3.2 million people, Taiz is the most populated governorate in Yemen where now three of its major hospitals are inaccessible or have been caught in the frontline of fire denying millions of displaced, sick and wounded civilians access to health services, WHO said in a press release issued recently over the weekend.
Now, according to WHO, an extreme spike in cases of dengue fever has been recorded in the governorate in the past 2 weeks from 145 suspected cases at the start of August to 421 by 25 August 2015.
"With the ongoing insecurity and mass displacement of thousands of people, it is likely that the situation will deteriorate in the coming days, placing over 3.2 million people at additional risk," the agency warned.
Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral disease, according to WHO. It is a febrile illness that affects infants, young children and adults with symptoms appearing 3-14 days after the infective bite. The infection causes flu-like illness, and occasionally develops into a potentially lethal complication called severe dengue.
"We need protection and safety for all people working to control the worrying outbreak of dengue fever in Taiz, which includes support with residual spraying, health education of communities and distribution of other supplies," Dr. Alwan said.
Furthermore, WHO reminded all parties to the conflict of their obligations under international humanitarian law to protect civilians, health facilities, and health professional during the conflict, and that health facilities must be treated as neutral premises and never be exploited for military purposes.