| 28 Septembre 2017
Cholera is a disease that continues to affect 2.9 million people each  year across 40 countries, many of which are in Africa. While clean  drinking water and advanced sanitation systems have made Europe and  North America cholera-free for decades, more than 2 billion people  remain without access to safe water and sanitation. Cholera continues to  disproportionately affect the poorest and most vulnerable people  worldwide and within each affected country. The Global Task Force on Cholera Control (GTFCC) brings together more  than 50 organizations to intensify efforts and strengthen partnerships  to reduce cholera deaths by 90% by 2030 through a renewed strategy and  global roadmap that focuses on:
 
 1. A multisectoral approach to control cholera in hotspots in endemic  countries – with a focus on improving water, sanitation and hygiene  (WASH) services
 2. Early detection and response to contain outbreaks at an early stage –  including strengthened disease surveillance systems, cholera  vaccination campaigns and improved case management
 3. An effective mechanism of coordination for technical support, resource mobilization and partnership at local and global level
 
 At the end of the launch, the Global Task Force on Cholera Control (GTFCC) will issue a Declaration to Ending Cholera.
 
 The launch of the Global Roadmap has been coordinated by the GTFCC  Secretariat with support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and  WaterAid and will be hosted by the Fondation Mérieux.









