|
DISEASE STILL A THREAT IN
ACHEH
By Jerry Norton
January 14, 2005 - (Reuters) Aid agencies have prevented
disease spreading through Indonesia's tsunami-stricken Aceh, but
the threat remained strong, the United Nations says, as doctors
report children dying from pneumonia.
Margareta Wahlstrom, the U.N. special coordinator
for the disaster, said on Friday efforts to prevent the spread of
disease in Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra island where almost
all Indonesia's 110,200 deaths occurred, should not be relaxed.
"There are no alarm bells ringing, but we cannot
slacken our efforts. The threat is still there," Wahlstrom
told a news conference in Jakarta after returning from Banda Aceh,
the provincial capital.
"As long as people live in groups where they haven't yet got
good sanitation and good health access, that will have to be given
very top-level attention."
About 700,000 people were made homeless in Aceh
by the December 26 earthquake in the Indian Ocean and ensuing tsunami
that has killed more than 162,000 in 13 countries. Thousands of
Indonesia's survivors are now living in makeshift camps.
At a large public hospital in Banda Aceh, Belgian
paediatrician Bert Suys, 38, told Reuters he had treated at least
13 children this week suffering from pneumonia after ingesting dirty
water either during or after the tsunami.
"We have actually had two children die this
Wednesday night and one yesterday of severe pneumonia," Suys
said.
The bottom floor of the hospital was severely damaged
in the tsunami and ruined medical equipment, furniture and beds
are stacked around the muddy grounds outside the building.
Suys said he was surprised he had not seen any cases
of cholera or dysentery, considering the lack of clean water,
and raised concerns about how Indonesia would cope once the foreign
medical teams had left.
"I think that once the Australians over here
and the Germans and we are gone everything will collapse again.
I'm afraid
for that," he said, referring to other foreign medical teams
staffing the hospital.
But the comments from Wahlstrom and Suys contrast
with an assessment overnight by the UN's World Health Organisation
(WHO), which said the risk of large disease fatalities was fading,
particularly the threat from water-borne diseases.
WHO said malaria was a key worry and the agency
has started spraying areas in Aceh to kill the growing number of
mosquitoes that spread the disease, which was already endemic in
the region.
Philip Maher, an emergency specialist with the aid
group World Vision in Banda Aceh, said fast relief work could usually
slow or stop the spread of most disease.
"After disasters like this there are often
predictions that there is going to be a second wave of diseases
and in most cases it doesn't happen. Maybe the reason is because
there is a warning flare that goes up, and everyone kicks into action.
"Things are not great, but it's not like a
refugee situation in Africa or something like that."
Yet Suys and Fauzi Arief, 40, the deputy director
of a military hospital in Banda Aceh, did not indicate there had
been any increase in the normal number of malaria cases with Arief
also backing Suys concerns about a cholera or dysentery outbreak.
"Until now there are no cases of dysentery
or cholera or other such diseases. But they are still a significant
risk in Banda Aceh ... there is not enough clean water," Arief
told Reuters.
From: http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/Swissinfo.html?siteSect=143&sid=5466658
|