| 07 Septembre 2017
More than 1 million doses of Gavi-funded cholera vaccines heading to Sierra Leone after severe flooding and landslides 5 SEPTEMBER 2017 | FREETOWN - Half a million people in Sierra Leone will  be able to access the life-saving cholera vaccine within weeks, the  country’s Ministry of Health and Sanitation announced on Tuesday.
 
 The vaccines will be received from the Gavi-funded global stockpile and  will target areas particularly affected by August’s floods and deadly  landslide, which resulted in over 500 confirmed deaths. Hundreds more  people were reported missing in the wake of the disaster, according to  the Office of National Security, while thousands were displaced from  their homes.
 
 “Cholera is a devastating disease which spreads quickly and kills fast,  and risks can increase after severe flooding,” said Dr. Brima Kargbo,  Chief Medical Officer at the Ministry of Health and Sanitation. “The  oral cholera vaccine is an important tool to better protect the country  and affected communities against the disease, which will ultimately save  lives.”
 
 Two rounds of vaccination are planned to run from September and will be  delivered in 25 affected communities by the Government of Sierra Leone  with support from Gavi Alliance, the World Health Organization (WHO),  UNICEF, the UK Government and other health partners.
 
 “The devastating floods and landslides which ravaged Sierra Leone  throughout August have left the country dangerously vulnerable to  water-borne disease outbreaks,” said Dr. Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi  Alliance. “Access to safe water and sanitation is limited, and the  public health system, still recovering after the 2014 Ebola outbreak, is  stretched. These lifesaving vaccines, alongside urgent support to  improve safe water and sanitation, have the potential to prevent a  cholera outbreak before it has the chance to bring more misery to a  country that has already suffered enough.”
 
 The decision to send cholera vaccines from the global stockpile was  taken quickly on 31th August by the International Coordinating Group  (ICG) for Vaccine Provision following the deployment of a WHO specialist  to the country. The full quantity of the vaccine (1,036,300 doses for  two rounds) is set to arrive in Freetown on 7th September through  UNICEF’s global Supply Division.
 
 WHO recommends that vaccination against cholera be considered in  emergencies and other high-risk scenarios where there are increased  threats of outbreaks, when combined with standard prevention and control  measures for the disease. These measures include readiness to provide  adequate testing and treatment, steps to ensure access to safe water and  sanitation, and community mobilization to engage the public in  preventing infection.
 
 Sierra Leone’s last major cholera outbreak, in 2012, killed 392 people and infected more than 25,000 others.
 
 Gavi, WHO, UNICEF and partners are working with the Ministry of Health  and Sanitation to help plan and implement the campaign, which will make  the vaccine available free-of-cost to disaster-affected populations,  while supporting ongoing cholera prevention and preparedness.









