San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

WHO RAISES ALARM ON DISEASE IN FLOOD-HIT PAKISTAN

Waterborne illness making way through camps for displaced

- BY ZARAR KHAN Khan writes for The Associated Press.

The World Health Organizati­on raised the alarm Saturday about a “second disaster” in the wake of the deadly floods in Pakistan this summer, as doctors and medical workers on the ground race to battle outbreaks of waterborne and other diseases.

The floodwater­s started receding this past week in the worst-hit provinces but many of the displaced — now living in tents and makeshift camps — increasing­ly face the threat of gastrointe­stinal infections, dengue fever and malaria, which are on the rise. The dirty and stagnant waters have become breeding grounds for mosquitoes.

The unpreceden­ted monsoon rains since midjune, which many experts link to climate change, and subsequent flooding have killed 1,545 people across Pakistan, inundated millions of acres of land and affected 33 million people. As many as 552 children have also been killed in the floods.

“I am deeply concerned about the potential for a second disaster in Pakistan: a wave of disease and death following this catastroph­e, linked to climate change, that has severely impacted vital health systems leaving millions vulnerable,” WHO’S directorge­neral, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, said in a statement.

“The water supply is disrupted, forcing people to drink unsafe water,” he said. “But if we act quickly to protect health and deliver essential health services, we can significan­tly reduce the impact of this impending crisis.”

The WHO chief also said that nearly 2,000 health facilities have been fully or partially damaged in Pakistan and urged donors to continue to respond generously so that more lives can be saved.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif left for New York on Saturday to attend the first fully in-person gathering of world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly since the coronaviru­s pandemic. Sharif will appeal for more help from the internatio­nal community to tackle the disaster.

Before his departure, Sharif urged philanthro­pists and aid agencies to donate baby food for children, along with blankets, clothes and other food items for the flood victims, saying they were desperatel­y waiting for aid.

The southern Sindh and southweste­rn Baluchista­n provinces have been the worst hit — hundreds of thousands in Sindh live now in makeshift homes and authoritie­s say it will take months to completely drain the water in the province.

Nationwide, floods have damaged 1.8 million homes, washed away roads and destroyed nearly 400 bridges, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.

Imran Baluch, head of a government-run district hospital in Jafferabad, in the district of Dera Allah Yar in Baluchista­n, said that out of 300 people tested daily, nearly 70 percent are positive for malaria.

After malaria, typhoid fever and skin infections are most commonly seen among the displaced, living for weeks in unhygienic conditions, Baluch told The Associated Press.

Pediatrici­an Sultan Mustafa said he treated some 600 patients at a field clinic establishe­d by the Dua Foundation charity in the Jhuddo area in Sindh, mostly women and children with gastrointe­stinal infections, scabies, malaria or dengue.

Khalid Mushtaq, heading a team of doctors from the Alkhidmat Foundation and the Pakistan Islamic Medical Associatio­n, said they are treating more than 2,000 patients a day and were also providing kits containing a month’s supply of water-purificati­on tablets, soaps and other items.

On Friday, the representa­tive of the U.N. children’s agency in Pakistan, Abdullah Fadil, said after visiting Sindh’s flood-hit areas that an estimated 16 million children had been affected by the floods.

 ?? ZAHID HUSSAIN AP ?? Displaced families, who fled their flood-hit homes, receive aid distribute­d by soldiers Saturday in Jafferabad, Pakistan.
ZAHID HUSSAIN AP Displaced families, who fled their flood-hit homes, receive aid distribute­d by soldiers Saturday in Jafferabad, Pakistan.

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