The logo of the World
Health Organization is seen at the WHO headquarters in Geneva (AP)
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An epidemic of meningitis has killed 545 people in Niger, out
of 8,234 people who caught the disease, but has now peaked, the World Health
Organization said on Tuesday.
The WHO had said that the
epidemic was worrying and unprecedented because it was a strain not normally
found in Africa and the appropriate vaccine was in short supply. In early May,
cases were tripling every two weeks.
Reuters report continues:
But the number of new
cases slowed in the second half of May amid a vaccination campaign in affected
areas.
The spread of the disease
peaked in the week to May 10, when there were 2,189 cases and 132 deaths. In
the last week of the month there were 264 cases and 8 deaths, WHO spokesman
Cory Couillard said in an emailed response to Reuters.
Meningitis is common
across the "meningitis belt" from Senegal to Ethiopia in the dry
season between December and June. A 2009 outbreak caused more than 80,000
cases, and more than 200,000 cases, including 20,000 deaths, in 1996-1997.
In January-April this
year, 17 countries reported a total of 11,838 cases and 910 deaths, according
to a WHO report published on Sunday. Among them, Niger, Ghana and Nigeria
registered "epidemics" of the disease, the report said.
The WHO declares disease
outbreaks to be epidemics if they clearly exceed usual expectations in the
community and the period in which they occur, triggering stronger measures to
stop the spread of the disease.
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