Is
the Black Death back?
47
already dead in Madagascar plague outbreak
RT,
25
November, 2014
Over
40 people have already died in a plague outbreak on Madagascar and
the UN World Health Organization (WHO) has warned of a “rapid”
spread of the bacterial disease carried by rats in the capital
Antananarivo.
The
death toll of the bubonic plague outbreak in Madagascar has risen to
47, Secretary-General of the Health Ministry of the island state
Philemon Tafangy said on Tuesday, while the number of suspected
plague cases reached 138.
The
first reported case on the island was a man from the village of
Soamahatamana on August 31. He later died on September 3.
On
November 4, the Health Ministry notified the WHO of a plague
outbreak. Since then, plague cases have been reported in 16
Madagascan regions – two percent of which are the pneumonic form.
There
have also been two cases, including one death, in the country's
capital of Antananarivo, where the disease is rapidly
spreading. “There
is now a risk of a rapid spread of the disease, due to the city’s
high population density and the weakness of the healthcare
system,” according
to a
WHO press release.
The
WHO said it is working with its partners – including the Red Cross,
the Pasteur Institute of Madagascar, and the Commune urbaine d’
Antananarivo – and the Madagascan government to try to control the
outbreak.
Measures
such as protective equipment, insecticides, spray materials, and
antibiotics have been“thoroughly
implemented in the affected districts,” according
to the organization.
But “the
situation is further complicated by the high level of resistance to
deltamethrin, an insecticide used to control fleas, that has been
observed in the country.
Plague
is a bacterial disease which mainly affects rats and is spread from
one rodent to another via fleas. If humans are then bitten by an
infected flea, they are likely to develop bubonic plague, which
produces a swelling of the lymph node. Bubonic plague can develop
into pneumonic plague, which is far more deadly.
“If
diagnosed early, bubonic plague can be successfully treated with
antibiotics. Pneumonic plague, on the other hand, is one of the most
deadly infectious diseases; patients can die 24 hours after
infection,”the
WHO said
The
situation in the capital is not helped by the housing that many
residents live in. Residents of Ankasina, a slum on the outskirts of
Antananarivo, say they lived in squalid conditions infested with
rats.
“Our
neighborhood is really dirty and has been neglected by the state for
a long time,” Bernadette
Rasoarimanano, the mother of a woman who has died of plague, told
AFP
The
WHO also said that from 2004 to 2013, more than 13,000 cases of
plague were reported – including 896 lethal cases. Africa had the
highest number of cases (97.6 percent).
In
the Middle Ages, around 25 million people died from bubonic plague in
Europe.
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