Cholera-hit Haiti needs nurses, doctors: UN

The cholera outbreak has killed more than 1,400 Haitians in five weeks.

Port-au-Prince: Haiti needs a surge of foreign nurses and doctors to stem deaths from a raging cholera epidemic that an international aid operation is struggling to control, the United Nations` top humanitarian official said.

About 1,000 trained nurses and at least 100 more doctors were urgently needed to control the epidemic, which has struck the impoverished Caribbean nation months after a destructive earthquake.

The outbreak has killed more than 1,400 Haitians in five weeks and the death toll is climbing by dozens each day.

"We clearly need to do more," Valerie Amos, the UN`s Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, said in Port-au-Prince during a visit seeking to increase the scale and urgency of the cholera response.

"But it`s not just money, it`s crucially people, in terms of getting more doctors, nurses, more people who can help with the awareness-raising and getting information out there," she said in an interview late on Tuesday at the UN logistics base in Port-au-Prince.

The real death toll may be closer to 2,000, UN officials say. Hundreds of thousands of Haitians are likely to catch the disease, they say, and the epidemic could last a year, complicating an arduous recovery from the January 12 earthquake.

Amos said the United Nations would reach out to countries and aid organisations with the potential to rapidly supply medical staff, for example Cuba, which already has about 400 doctors and other health personnel in Haiti.

Despite the health crisis, Haiti is going ahead with Presidential and Legislative Elections on Sunday, as the United Nations and aid groups desperately try to drum up more international funding and support to fight the unchecked cholera crisis.

Hospitals and treatment centres across the country are overflowing with cholera patients. Many of the sick are being treated outdoors, in courtyards and tents.

Additional personnel were urgently needed to run health information campaigns and help staff oral rehydration units, which the government and its aid partners are scrambling to set up across Haiti.

"We have to control the outbreak and we have to bring down the percentage of people who are dying and we have to do that as a matter of urgency," Amos said.

If untreated, cholera, a virulent diarrhoeal disease, can kill in hours, but if caught early enough can be easily treated through rehydration of the infected person.

"I`m being told it hasn`t reached its peak yet, that it will get worse before it gets better," Amos said.

She said Haiti, the Western Hemisphere`s poorest state, had been slammed by multiple successive emergencies this year -- the January earthquake, the cholera outbreak starting in mid-October, a hurricane that ravaged crops and caused flooding in early November -- putting it high on the priority list of the UN humanitarian mission.

UN officials say the international response to an appeal by the world body for USD 164 million to fund a scaled-up cholera response has been insufficient. Amos said her task was to make sure the international community did not forget about Haiti.

The World Bank announced in Washington it was preparing a USD 10 million cholera emergency grant for Haiti, which would be used to bolster the surveillance and monitoring capacity of the country`s health and sanitation authorities.

In Port-au-Prince, representatives of the Inter-American Development Bank and the Spanish government cooperation agency also announced a USD 20 million grant for the cholera response.

Bureau Report

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