From dora at bdt Mon Jun 28 11:25:11 1993 From: dora at bdt (Dora Ann Lange Canhos) Date: Sat Feb 18 11:22:32 2006 Subject: Leishmaniasis Epidemic in Southern Sudan Message-ID: <9306281225.AA00960@sabia.ftpt.br> Press Release WHO/6 26 January 1993 LEISHMANIASIS EPIDEMIC IN SOUTHERN SUDAN Between 300 000 and 400 000 persons in Southern Sudan are currently at risk of infection by Leishmaniasis - also known as Kala Azar - in what experts at the World Health Organization consider to be largest epidemic of the deadly disease in recorded history. Recent reports suggest that as many as 40 000 persons may already have died and that the population of some villages has been reduced by 30 to 40%. The affected area, in the Upper West Nile province of Southern Sudan is a war zone. Fighting between Sudanese governments troops and rebels of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) has made it impossible to undertake the large scale measures required to control effectively the spread of the disease. (Symptoms, prognosis) (Treatment) (Reference to Gulf war) The first signs of the epidemic became apparent in mid-1988 though it was first believe to be an epidemic of typhoid fever. The non-governmental organizations "M‚decins sans FrontiŠres" (Netherlands) which had reported the first cases determined late in the year that the disease was indeed Leishmaniasis and that it affected thousands of persons both in Upper West Nile and in the capital, Khartoum, where many had fled in search of security. (MSF Programme, WHO support) (Current situation, appeal?)