Hepatitis E Under Control In Maban County

The Hepatitis E outbreak in Upper Nile state has been put under
control with the number of new infections declining significantly in
April, an official has said.


 15 May 2013





The Upper Nile State Health Minister Dr. Charles Yor Odhok said that
the outbreak started in mid 2012 at Yida camps of Maban County housing
Sudanese refugees.[Jok P Mayom]

By Jok P Mayom

MALAKAL, 14 May 2013 [Gurtong]- The Upper Nile State Health Minister
Dr. Charles Yor Odhok has said that the outbreak of the disease
started in mid 2012 at Yida camps of Maban County housing Sudanese
refugees from South Kordofan and Blue Nile states.

The ministry stated that the case of the outbreak in the camps were
9,740 cases with a total of about 182 confirmed dead.

The series of disease infection and attacks in the camps were greatly
recorded in Yusuf Batil camp with 60 per cent of cases during the
outbreak followed by Jamam camps, Gendrassa camps and Doro camps.

However a total of about 50 cases were recorded among host communities
in the county following the outbreak.

In his last visit the minister said that the disease has reduced now
in infection due to the intervention put forward by the UN Agencies in
Maban.

Last month, UNHCR and the UNICEF carried out the educational campaign
of the disease where they taught the community about the disease and
control measures following the outbreak.

Hygiene and sanitation were improved and that led to the reduction in
the number of cases in the areas, adding that the number of toilet
facilities used and the population avoided open air defecation.

The disease affected the refugees that were brought from Sudan’s Blue
Nile State due to the war that broke out in the area forcing the
number of refugees to flee to the western part of the state.

Last year, the refugee’s influx to Upper Nile increased leading to
overcrowding in the camps and that led to the incidence of the
disease.

The frequent wars have resulted into massive increase in the refugee
number to more than 1,000 at the refugee’s camps.

The camps occupied by the refugees and where the incidence occurs were
the Yida, Jamam amongst others.

“The disease only infected the Sudanese’s refugees who were
accommodated at the camps,” said Dr. Charles.

The minister said that the water system which was the main point of
infection has been improved through installation of water systems and
increasing their number.

On March 30, the UN refugee agency opened a new refugee camp (Ajoung
Thok camp) in the vicinity with the capacity to accommodate up to
20,000 refugees.

This reduces the number of refugees in Yida camps thus creating ample spaces.

The Ajoung Thok camp provides access to education, health care and
livelihood opportunities which has paved way to the reduction of the
disease in the area.


 Posted in: Home, Governance, Health, Humanitarian

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