Zimbabwe Situation

Cholera Response – Emergency Appeal Operational Strategy (MDRZW021) – Zimbabwe

Situation Report in English on Zimbabwe about Health, Protection and Human Rights, Epidemic and more; published on 19 Dec 2023 by IFRC

Source: Zimbabwe, Africa | Cholera Response – Emergency Appeal Operational Strategy (MDRZW021) – Zimbabwe | ReliefWeb

TIMELINE

12 February 2023: First cholera case reported in Chegutu town, Mashonaland-West.

15 February: Second case reported; government activates cholera response taskforces at all levels and a first cholera treatment centre (CTC) is set up in Chegutu.

18 April: Suspected cases increase to 579 with 9 suspected deaths reported.

6 June: IFRC DREF is allocated covering five districts in Manicaland province and Matebeleland-South.
October: Cholera continues spreading and is reported in 43 districts across the country, making international headlines.

16 November: IFRC issues Emergency Appeal for CHF 3 million, covering 550,455 people.

7 November: Suspected cases reach 6,685 according to the Zimbabwe Ministry of Health and Childcare Cholera Situation Report.

17 November: Harare City declares a state of emergency.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EVENT

The first cases of cholera in this outbreak were recorded on 12 February 2023 in Chegutu town, Mashonaland West province. By 10 November there were 6,114 suspected cases, 48 confirmed deaths, 134 suspected deaths and a case fatality rate of 2.7 per cent. To date suspected and confirmed cases have been reported in all 10 provinces of the country.

The outbreak has spread beyond the 17 previous hotspot districts due to (1) poor hygiene practices, (2) unsupervised gatherings and funerals, (3) high usage of unsafe/unprotected sources of water for drinking and domestic use, (4) low national sanitation coverage with 40 per cent open defecation, and (5) low safe-water coverage, which is just 35 per cent.

Severity of humanitarian conditions

1. Impact on accessibility, availability, quality, use and awareness of goods and services

Zimbabwe continues to face challenges in service provision, including in water and sanitation, and some communities are using unsafe water with attendant periodic diarrhoeal outbreaks, including cholera. The health system has now been overstretched due to the high number of admissions.

2. Impact on physical and mental well-being

3. Risks & vulnerabilities

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