| 21 Août 2016
 Bangui/Brazzaville, 11 August 2016 – Amid an ongoing complex  humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic (CAR), the World  Health Organization (WHO) and partners are working with the country’s  Ministry of Health respond to a cholera outbreak declared on 10 August  2016 with 46 confirmed cases and 13 deaths from Djoujou, Damara and  Bangui cities.
Bangui/Brazzaville, 11 August 2016 – Amid an ongoing complex  humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic (CAR), the World  Health Organization (WHO) and partners are working with the country’s  Ministry of Health respond to a cholera outbreak declared on 10 August  2016 with 46 confirmed cases and 13 deaths from Djoujou, Damara and  Bangui cities. “This cholera outbreak in villages along the banks of the Oubangui  river simply compounds the already worrisome health security needs for  the people in the CAR who have already suffered so much from the  effects of a protracted humanitarian crisis due to war and  displacement,” said Dr Michel Yao, WR representative to CAR.
 
 The reported cases are mainly from villages along the river bordering  DRC’s Equateur province where the index case fell sick after travel from  DRC.
 
 WHO is also assisting the government of DRC to respond to a cholera  outbreak in the provinces of Equateur, Tshopo and Mongala provinces.  Cholera is endemic in DRC.
  
 WHO RESPONSE
 
 WHO and the Ministry of Health and Sanitation have activated a cholera  control command centre within the country’s existing Emergency  Operational Centre which includes all humanitarian partners on the  ground with taskforces covering case management, surveillance, WASH,  Risk Communication and Social Mobilization, Logistics, Security and  management of dead bodies.
 
 Patients who reached Bangui are being treated in a treatment center  established with WHO support. Current treatment supplies are from stocks  that were already pre-positioned as part of the country’s cholera  preparedness for the rainy season.
 
 As part of the overall health partners response, a mobile MSF team is  conducting water source treatment and community engagement activities in  villages along the Oubangui river.
 
 “The continuing crisis in the country including insecurity in some areas  has exacerbated existing challenges with disease surveillance, which is  essential to enable early detection and an efficient response to  outbreaks such as cholera,” warned Dr Michel Yao. “There is urgent need  for additional resources to enhance disease surveillance as well as  support to restore health services in a country with many public health  threats”
 http://www.afro.who.int/fr/republique-centrafricaine/press-materials/item/8889-who-heightens-health-response-to-cholera-outbreak-in-car.html 
 For more information on cholera, please the WHO fact sheet on cholera:
 
 http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs107/en/









