In 2022, at least 30 countries have seen outbreaks of cholera or cholera-like diseases. In response, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is running cholera programs in 11 countries including Cameroon, Ethiopia, Haiti, Kenya, Lebanon, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Syria.
Our teams are involved in cholera prevention through health promotion activities, cholera vaccination campaigns, and water and sanitation works. We’re also running cholera units to treat patients in medical facilities, and have set up bigger, separate cholera centers where hundreds of cholera patients can be admitted simultaneously.
Pillars of MSF's cholera response
Cholera is easy to treat, with oral rehydration for most patients, and intravenous rehydration for more severe cases. If treated in time, more than 99% of patients will survive the disease. An effective response to cholera involves engaging on several different fronts at the same time—and as fast as possible—to treat sick patients and to stop transmission within communities.
The key pillars of this strategy rely on MSF's medical staff working alongside epidemiologists, water and sanitation experts, logistics managers and community health promoters. Since an effective oral vaccine became available within the past decade, we have also incorporated large-scale vaccination campaigns into our response.
A big part of MSF’s ability to respond quickly is our standardized, pre-positioned cholera treatment kits that come equipped with rehydration salts, antibiotics, and IVs, along with buckets, boots, chlorine, and plastic sheeting—in short, everything needed to hit the ground running after an outbreak is confirmed.
Causes of Cholera
Cholera is a highly contagious disease that occurs in settings without clean water and proper sanitation. It causes profuse diarrhea and vomiting, and without treatment can quickly lead to death by intense dehydration. For most countries, the current surge of cholera is due to specific, local conditions.
Natural disasters
Heat and drought can reduce the amount of safe drinking water, forcing people to use unsafe sources. Floods on the other hand, can facilitate the bacteria’s spread to previously safe water sources. In 2022, countries like Somalia, Kenya, and Ethiopia suffered from severe droughts. Others, like South Sudan and Nigeria, faced floods.
December 05 12:00 AM
Syria: Cholera outbreak worsens an already dire humanitarian situation
Read MoreDisplacement
Refugees often have to stay in places where there’s not enough access to clean water, and authorities often don’t invest in proper water and waste infrastructure in refugee camps. This year, there were cholera outbreaks in refugee camps in Lebanon, Somalia, and Nigeria.
November 17 02:41 PM
Lebanon: MSF vaccinates people against cholera as disease continues to spread
Read MoreChallenges to the cholera response
Treatment and prevention of cholera come with considerable logistic challenges. Setting up cholera treatment centers requires a lot of supplies, and so do water and sanitation projects. In places that are unsafe or otherwise difficult to access, that is a huge constraint. The number of outbreaks this year makes it very challenging. There’s already a shortage of cholera vaccines and the supply of other essential materials, like the fluid for intravenous rehydration, is also under pressure.
October 19 10:16 AM
MSF responds to change in global cholera vaccine strategy amid unprecedented number of outbreaks
Read MoreFor political reasons, some governments don’t want to officially declare cholera outbreaks. This makes it very difficult to adequately inform people about how they can protect themselves, and impossible to do cholera vaccination campaigns.
Cholera is notoriously underreported and reliable global figures about the number of cases aren’t available. The best estimates are between 1.5 and 4 million cases every year.
How you can help
Not everyone can treat patients in the field. But everyone can do something.
Some humanitarian crises make the headlines—others don’t. Unrestricted support from our donors allows us to mobilize quickly and efficiently to provide lifesaving medical care to the people who need it most, whether those needs are in the spotlight or not. And your donation is 100 percent tax-deductible.