WHO warns of increased risk of disease epidemics in Syria and in neighbouring countries as summer approaches
 
				
							
								
					 
				
							
								
					 
				
					
						
		| 04 Juin 2013
 The World Health Organization is deeply concerned about the increasing  cases of communicable diseases inside the Syria and among displaced  Syrians in neighbouring countries in the Region, and warns that lack of  prevention and control measures will create a potential risk of  outbreaks.
The World Health Organization is deeply concerned about the increasing  cases of communicable diseases inside the Syria and among displaced  Syrians in neighbouring countries in the Region, and warns that lack of  prevention and control measures will create a potential risk of  outbreaks.
 
 Over the past two years, Syria’s health system has been severely  disrupted. At least 35% of the country’s public hospitals are out of  service, and in some governorates, up to 70% of the health workforce has  fled, resulting in severe shortages in qualified health personnel,  limiting availability for those in need of health care services. Almost  4.25 million internally-displaced Syrians who have relocated to less  volatile areas are mostly living in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions.  The provision of safe drinking water and safe sanitation has been  disrupted, and there are challenges in implementing vaccination  campaigns and vector control programmes. As the health situation  deteriorates and temperatures continue to rise, this increases the risk  of epidemics.
 
 “All the risk factors that enhance the transmission of communicable  diseases in emergencies are present in the current crisis in Syria and  its neighbouring countries,” said Dr Jaouad Mahjour, Director of the  Department for Communicable Diseases at WHO’s Regional Office for the  Eastern Mediterranean. “We are anticipating a number of public health  risks from water-borne diseases, specifically hepatitis, typhoid,  cholera and dysentery. Given the scale of population movement both  inside Syria and across borders, together with deteriorating  environmental health conditions, outbreaks are inevitable.”
 
 In the first quarter of 2013, Syria’s early warning system for disease  outbreaks, which covers all of the country’s 14 governorates, reported  significant increases in acute watery diarrhoea, which increased by 172%  from 243 cases in the first week of January 2013 to 660 in the second  week of May 2013; and hepatitis A, which increased by 219% from 48 cases  in to 153 cases in the same time period. Increased cases of enteric  fever (typhoid) were also reported in 2013.
 
 New cases of vaccine-preventable diseases such as measles have also  reappeared in Syria due to a drop in national vaccination coverage from  95% in 2010 to an estimated 45% in 2013. In the first quarter of 2013,  the number of laboratory-confirmed measles cases in Syria reached 139,  compared to zero cases in 2010 and 2011, and 71% of these cases were  shown to be not vaccinated. National campaigns to vaccinate children  below the age of 5 have been hindered due to accessibility and security  issues, resulting in high numbers of unvaccinated children in  inaccessible areas.
 
 Since 2012, WHO has received reports of increased cases of cutaneous  leishmaniasis in Syria. Cutaneous leishmaniasis is a vector-borne  disease that is transmitted to humans through sand fly bites, and is  highly endemic in parts of Syria, mainly in Aleppo. However, due to  internal population movement and limited access of patients to health  care, an increasing number of cases have been reported by WHO among  internally-displaced persons (IDPs) in Tartous governorate, where the  disease was previously unreported. Prevention and control measures, such  as distribution of insecticide-treated bed nets, are being hampered due  to population displacement and a lack of trained health workers,  increasing the risk of outbreaks.
 
 With thousands of Syrians crossing the borders each day, diseases that  are prevalent inside Syria are being transmitted to neighbouring  countries. Measles, tuberculosis and cutaneous leishmaniasis have been  reported among displaced Syrians in Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey.  “Jordan had previously reported zero cases of measles for 3 years, and  was planning to officially declare that it was measles-free. The  situation will deteriorate if prevention and control measures are not  scaled up soon,” said Dr Mahjour.
 
 Key prevention and control measures by WHO and partners to respond to  public health threats from infectious diseases include supplying safe  drinking water and sanitation, strengthening early warning systems for  the detection of diseases, distribution of bed nets, and pre-positioning  medicines and medical supplies, in addition to emergency mass  vaccination campaigns both inside Syria and in neighbouring countries.  Additional activities planned with health partners over the next three  months include training of first-line responders, pre-positioning  medicines and medical supplies, and ensuring sufficient laboratory  capacity to identify infectious diseases, and implementing a summer  outbreak containment plan.






