The Yemen cholera outbreak has been driven by years of conflict and has now become the largest in epidemiologically recorded history with more than 1.2 million cases since the beginning of the outbreak in April, 2017. In this report we review and discuss the cholera management strategies applied by the major international humanitarian health organizations present in Yemen. We find the response by the organizations examined to have been more focused on case management than on outbreak prevention. Oral Cholera Vaccines (OCVs) were not delivered until nearly 16 months into the outbreak. A recent scale-up of the global OCV stockpile will hopefully allow for rapid mass deployment of the OCV in future humanitarian emergencies. Continuous funding ...
Cholera is endemic and remains a significant public health problem in places like South Sudan where ...
Cholera, a disease with a long history, continues to devastate populations around the world. Due to ...
This report is the first instalment of the ‘Social Science in Epidemics’ series, commissioned by the...
Abstract The Yemen cholera outbreak has been driven by years of conflict and has now become the larg...
BACKGROUND: Large epidemics frequently emerge in conflict-affected states. We examined the cholera r...
Vibrio cholerae (V. cholerae) are Gram - negative, curved, rod - shaped and facultatively anaerobic ...
Introduction: Although cases were reported only in 2010 and 2011, cholera is probably endemic in Yem...
BACKGROUND: In war-torn Yemen, reports of confirmed cholera started in late September, 2016. The dis...
• A global oral cholera vaccine (OCV) stockpile was established in 2013 to improve rapid access to t...
Two meetings of the World Health Organization (WHO)-in 1999 and 2002-had examined the potential use ...
BACKGROUND: Cholera epidemics occur frequently in low-income countries affected by concurrent humani...
Background: Yemen where a new cholera outbreak started in 2016 and continued to spread till 2020, be...
Objectives: To improve prevention and control response to the cholera outbreak, we sought to assess ...
International audienceBackground In war-torn Yemen, reports of con rmed cholera started in late Sept...
Cholera is an acute diarrheal infection caused by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with t...
Cholera is endemic and remains a significant public health problem in places like South Sudan where ...
Cholera, a disease with a long history, continues to devastate populations around the world. Due to ...
This report is the first instalment of the ‘Social Science in Epidemics’ series, commissioned by the...
Abstract The Yemen cholera outbreak has been driven by years of conflict and has now become the larg...
BACKGROUND: Large epidemics frequently emerge in conflict-affected states. We examined the cholera r...
Vibrio cholerae (V. cholerae) are Gram - negative, curved, rod - shaped and facultatively anaerobic ...
Introduction: Although cases were reported only in 2010 and 2011, cholera is probably endemic in Yem...
BACKGROUND: In war-torn Yemen, reports of confirmed cholera started in late September, 2016. The dis...
• A global oral cholera vaccine (OCV) stockpile was established in 2013 to improve rapid access to t...
Two meetings of the World Health Organization (WHO)-in 1999 and 2002-had examined the potential use ...
BACKGROUND: Cholera epidemics occur frequently in low-income countries affected by concurrent humani...
Background: Yemen where a new cholera outbreak started in 2016 and continued to spread till 2020, be...
Objectives: To improve prevention and control response to the cholera outbreak, we sought to assess ...
International audienceBackground In war-torn Yemen, reports of con rmed cholera started in late Sept...
Cholera is an acute diarrheal infection caused by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with t...
Cholera is endemic and remains a significant public health problem in places like South Sudan where ...
Cholera, a disease with a long history, continues to devastate populations around the world. Due to ...
This report is the first instalment of the ‘Social Science in Epidemics’ series, commissioned by the...