SAINT-MARC, Haiti (AP) — The cholera epidemic that has raged across this country is claiming fewer victims, with a sharp drop in new cases everywhere from the shimmering rice fields of the Artibonite Valley to the crowded urban slums.
It is a welcome development, but tinged with doubt:
It's not yet known whether the epidemic that has killed nearly 4,000 people is
fading or merely taking a break, only to surge again perhaps with the onset of
the next rainy season.
"The general situation is improving. It's
clear," Stefano Zannini, chief of mission for the aid group Doctors
Without Borders, said Sunday. "The problem is that the possible
development of the epidemic is unpredictable. It is impossible to say whether
the situation will continue stabilizing."
Any progress on controlling the disease would be a
rare bit of good news for Haiti, which is passing through a particularly gloomy
period. The country is on edge amid a political crisis over a disputed
presidential election, and could see more of the violent protests that
paralyzed cities and hampered cholera treatment in December. Meanwhile hundreds
of thousands are still homeless from last year's earthquake, and a much-reviled
former dictator suddenly returned and took up residence in the past week.
Zannini, whose group is contemplating scaling back
its more than 40 cholera treatment centers, was unable to muster even cautious
optimism regarding the disease. The best he could say was that he was happy new
cases and deaths are decreasing to levels not seen since soon after the disease
emerged in October.
"I would not be optimistic," he said in
an interview with The Associated Press at his Port-au-Prince office.
For the moment, at least, the statistics are moving
in the right direction. The number of new cases has dropped to about 4,700 per
week, down from more than 12,000 per week in November, and the trend is
downward in all 10 of Haiti's departments, or regions, according to the Health
Ministry's latest bulletin, released Thursday. The only places it appears to be
still rising are in a few isolated spots in the northwest and south.
A new network of cholera treatment centers staffed
by Haitian doctors and nurses, NGOs and international volunteers has made it
easier for victims to get oral and intraveneous rehydration. The disease is
relatively easy to treat if caught in time.
There have also been extensive efforts to ensure
access to clean water, as well as public public health campaigns. Finally the
dry conditions of recent weeks have slowed the spread of the bacteria.
Some 40 patients a day are still coming to the
Doctors Without Borders treatment center in Saint Marc, where the disease first
exploded, but that's a third of what it was in December and there hasn't been a
death in six weeks, said field coordinator Oscar Sanchez Rey.
"Is this is the end? Nobody really knows, but
the situation is better," Sanchez said as he took a break from treating
patients, including a family of six that all came down with the disease
together. He cautioned that even though fewer people are getting sick, the
center's work is still critical: "If no one is treating patients, they are
going to die, because it's a lethal disease."
Lilane Estime, 42, tried to sleep on a wooden bench
as doctors attended to three of her children. She said all four had piled onto
a motorcycle taxi and traveled an hour along a dusty coastal road to reach the
clinic. Seemingly healthy, she said she could feel cholera inside her, though
she hadn't gotten sick yet.
In Cite Soleil, the dense slum at the northern edge
of Port-au-Prince, the number of new cases is now about 15 per week, down from
a high of 700, and there are similar reports from nearby neighborhoods. In the
hard-hit Artibonite Valley, the weekly new caseload is about 700, compared with
more than 4,800 in November.
"We don't want to say, 'OK, cholera is
finished,' because it's not," said Cinta Pluma, a spokeswoman for the aid
group Oxfam. "But it does seem to be going down."
Caused by a bacteria that spreads through
contaminated water, the disease so far has sickened more than 194,000 people
and killed about 3,890 nationwide. It can lead to a rapid, painful death
through complete dehydration, but is easily treatable if caught in time.
In December, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon
warned the outbreak could affect as many as 650,000 people over six months, but
that seems less likely now. The Pan-American Health Organization still projects
cholera will sicken about 400,000 people over a year.
The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization warned
in December that cholera would also worsen hunger in the impoverished nation.
Surveys showed workers in the Artibonite, Haiti's main agriculture zone, were
afraid to wade into rice fields and the public was shunning the region's
produce, causing steep price drops in the local street markets. Jackson Dorgil,
an FAO agricultural technician in the area, said prices for staple crops such as
onions, tomatoes and melons plummeted — and much couldn't be sold at all.
But that too seems to have improved. At the
region's main market in Pont-Sonde on Saturday, prices and sales were back to
normal, with hundreds of women selling produce, fish and other products in neat
little pyramids spread over burlap sacks. "Life is starting to be normal
again," Dorgil said during a tour of the region.
Rice fields there were filled with barefoot workers
up to their ankles in muddy water believed to be contaminated with the cholera
bacteria, planting the crop under a blistering sun. Most earn about $2.50 for a
six-hour workday.
Fresnel Louis, the president of a worker's
association in the area, said radio commentators were warning people not to go
into the water at the start of the outbreak, but there were few options.
"If you tell people in the Artibonite not to
touch the water, you are telling them not to work — because that's what we have
here," Louis said.
Those rice fields could lead to a resurgence of the
disease. There were no latrines in sight, nor any supplies of potable water —
the same conditions that helped spread cholera so rapidly in the first place.
Zannini said any immunity typically lasts six to
eight weeks, so people will be prone to catching it again when the rainy season
starts in the spring, sending the bacteria coursing through rivers and streams.
"Lack of immunization, lack of access to clean
water and a difficult hygienic situation still keep the population exposed to a
new outbreak," he said.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
Photo Caption: Farmers clean rice fields covered in muddy water believed to be
contaminated by the cholera bacteria in Saint-Marc, Haiti, Saturday Jan. 22,
2011. The cholera epidemic that killed nearly 4,000 people, is claiming fewer
victims, with a sharp drop in new cases everywhere from the Artibonite Valley
to the crowded urban slums. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)






