| 27 Août 2017
Freetown, Sierra Leone, 21 August 2017 – The World Health Organization (WHO) is working closely with the  Government of Sierra Leone to prevent the spread of infectious diseases  such as malaria and cholera in the wake of last week’s mudslides and  flooding in Freetown. The Organization is also working with partners to  ensure ongoing health care for the injured and displaced, and to provide  psychological aid to those coping with trauma.
 
 Around 500 people are known to have died as a result of the flooding and  mudslides that devastated whole communities in and around Sierra  Leone’s capital, Freetown, and hundreds more are still missing. With  thousands displaced and local infrastructure destroyed, WHO has  mobilized significant human, technical and financial resources to  respond to the emergency.
 
 “The mudslides have caused extreme suffering and loss of life, and we  must do all we can to protect the population from additional health  risks,” said Alexander Chimbaru, Officer in Charge of WHO Sierra Leone.
 
 With damage to water and sanitation facilities, residents of affected  areas are particularly vulnerable to outbreaks of pre-existing  infectious diseases including malaria and diarrheal conditions such as  typhoid and cholera. The most recent cholera outbreak in the country  occurred in 2012.
 
 WHO is working with health authorities in the country to maximize  efforts to prevent and respond to disease outbreaks. Cholera response  kits, including rapid testing tools, are being distributed to areas at  risk; health and community workers are being trained to recognize the  signs of priority diseases, and the Organization is sending additional  cholera and emergency kits to the country.
 
 “While the Government and WHO are working hard to strengthen health  services in the affected areas, we also urge the population to take the  following precautions to help avoid a possible outbreak: hand washing,  drinking only water that has been properly boiled or treated, use of  latrines for sanitation, and adherence to good food hygiene practices”,  added Dr. Chimbaru.
 
 WHO is also providing extensive support in the area of infection  prevention and control at health facilities and at the mortuary located  at the Connaught Hospital in Freetown, as well as community engagement  and psychological first aid.