Écrit par HO			
				
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				07 Septembre 2017			
			
				
		
				
				
		
Malaria  infections are on the rise in South Sudan, with more than 1.3 million  people infected in 2017, and thousands others sick with measles and  cholera
Juba, 6 September 2017 – South Sudan’s disease burden  is rising rapidly in the midst of a protracted conflict that is causing  widespread displacement and a major food crisis.
Malaria season is underway across much of sub-Saharan Africa, but in  South Sudan it exacts a particularly heavy toll – the country’s entire  population is at high risk of contracting the illness because of a  fractured health system and challenges related to accessing the  population due to insecurity.
An estimated 1.3 million people have fallen ill with malaria this year,  while thousands are affected by cholera and measles – particularly  along the Nile River and in camps for displaced people.
“Disease is a leading cause of death in South Sudan today, and malaria  is the number one killer,” says Evans Liyosi, WHO South Sudan  Representative a.i.
The deadly mosquito-borne disease accounts for 65 per cent of all  illnesses reported in health facilities across the country. Every week  it infects more than 77 500 people and kills nearly 220 – most of them  children under the age of five.
South Sudan has also recorded nearly 20 000 cases of cholera and more than one thousand victims of measles since January.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and partners are working to provide  critical health services to 2.7 million people targeted for health  across the country, but the health response faces a staggering 84 per  cent funding gap.
To help respond to disease outbreaks, WHO regularly deploys mobile  medical teams to outbreak hotspots for diseases such as cholera and  malaria. The teams also train frontline health workers on malaria  diagnosis and treatment to improve quality of care and access to  treatment.
Oral cholera vaccination campaigns have vaccinated nearly one million  people against cholera – stemming the spread of the disease in areas  where the vaccine was deployed. Awareness raising interventions and  cholera treatment facilities have also helped to contain the spread of  the waterborne illness.
To control the measles outbreak in the Greater Upper Nile Region, WHO  and health partners are working to vaccinate 800 000 previously  unreached children under age five by the end of the year.
Across the country, malnutrition, severe pneumonia, malaria and  perinatal complications remain the most common causes of death in  children under five.
WHO leads the health cluster response in South Sudan and works with the  national authorities to strengthen surveillance, preparedness and  response for disease outbreaks and other health emergencies.