Showing posts with label Outbreak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outbreak. Show all posts

Friday, July 26, 2013

NEW: CDC Responds to Cholera Outbreak in Haiti

St. Marc’s Hospital, where the most seriously ill patients have been triaged to clinicians and others wait to be seen

CDC is working closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners in support of the Haitian government’s response to the cholera outbreak in that country. CDC is collaborating with the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Pan American Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund, and a host of other organizations to assist the Haiti Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) in a concerted effort to control the outbreak.

For more information about the outbreak in Haiti and about cholera in general, see


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UPDATE: Travelers' Health - Outbreak Notice, Cholera in Haiti

Warning - Level 3, Avoid Nonessential TravelAlert - Level 2, Practice Enhanced PrecautionsWatch - Level 1, Practice Usual Precautions

An outbreak of cholera has been ongoing in Haiti since October 2010. According to the Ministere de la Sante Publique et de la Population (MSPP), as of May 22, 2013, 657,117 cases and 8,096 deaths have been reported since the cholera epidemic began in Haiti. Among the cases reported, 363,740 (55.4%) were hospitalized. Cases have been officially reported in all 10 departments of Haiti. In Port-au-Prince, the country’s capital, 176,935 cases have been reported since the beginning of the outbreak. Cases in Port-au-Prince have been reported from the following neighborhoods: Carrefour, Cite Soleil, Delmas, Kenscoff, Petion Ville, Port-au-Prince and Tabarre.

For more information on cholera cases, see the Health Summary Report from MSPP.

Cholera is a bacterial disease that can cause diarrhea and dehydration. Cholera is most often spread through the ingestion of contaminated food or drinking water. Water may be contaminated by the feces of an infected person or by untreated sewage. Food is often contaminated by water containing cholera bacteria or by being handled by a person ill with cholera.

Since the earthquake, the U.S. Department of State has maintained a travel warning for Haiti urging U.S. citizens to avoid all nonessential travel to Haiti. For more information, see http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/tw/tw_5541.html.

Most travelers are not at high risk for getting cholera, but people who are traveling to Haiti should still take their own supplies to help prevent the disease and to treat it. Items to pack include

A prescription antibiotic to take in case of diarrheaWater purification tablets*Oral rehydration salts*

*In the United States, these products can be purchased at stores that sell equipment for camping or other outdoor activities.

Although no cholera vaccine is available in the United States, travelers can prevent cholera by following these 5 basic steps:

Bottled water with unbroken seals and canned/bottled carbonated beverages are safe to drink and use.Use safe water to brush your teeth, wash and prepare food, and make ice.Clean food preparation areas and kitchenware with soap and safe water and let dry completely before reuse.

*Piped water sources, drinks sold in cups or bags, or ice may not be safe. All drinking water and water used to make ice should be boiled or treated with chlorine.
To be sure water is safe to drink and use:

Boil it or treat it with water purification tablets, a chlorine product, or household bleach.Bring your water to a complete boil for at least 1 minute.To treat your water, use water purification tablets, if you brought some with you from the United States, or one of the locally available treatment products, and follow the instructions.If a chlorine treatment product is not available, you can treat your water with household bleach. Add 8 drops of household bleach for every 1 gallon of water (or 2 drops of household bleach for every 1 liter of water) and wait 30 minutes before drinkingAlways store your treated water in a clean, covered container.Before you eat or prepare foodBefore feeding your childrenAfter using the latrine or toiletAfter cleaning your child’s bottomAfter taking care of someone ill with diarrhea

*If no soap is available, scrub hands often with ash or sand and rinse with safe water.

Use latrines or other sanitation systems, like chemical toilets, to dispose of feces.Wash hands with soap and safe water after using toilets or latrines.Clean latrines and surfaces contaminated with feces using a solution of 1 part household bleach to 9 parts water.

What if I don’t have a latrine or chemical toilet?

Defecate at least 30 meters away from any body of water and then bury your feces.Dispose of plastic bags containing feces in latrines, at collection points if available, or bury it in the ground. Do not put plastic bags in chemical toilets.Dig new latrines or temporary pit toilets at least a half-meter deep and at least 30 meters away from any body of water.Boil it, cook it, peel it, or leave itBe sure to cook shellfish (like crabs and crayfish) until they are very hot all the way through.Do not bring perishable seafood back to the United States.

*Avoid raw foods other than fruits and vegetables you have peeled yourself.

Wash yourself, your children, diapers, and clothes at least 30 meters away from drinking water sources.

Before departing for Haiti, talk to your doctor about getting a prescription for an antibiotic. If you get sick with diarrhea while you are in Haiti, you can take the antibiotic, as prescribed. Also, remember to drink fluids and use oral rehydration salts (ORS) to prevent dehydration.

If you have severe watery diarrhea, seek medical care right away.

Medical care facilities are strained with the high number of people who are ill. If you will be traveling to Haiti, CDC recommends that you purchase medical evacuation insurance in the event that you become ill while in Haiti. (See the U.S. Department of State list of U.S.-Based Air Ambulance or Medical Evacuation Companies.) If you are in Haiti and need medical care and you do not have access to medical evacuation, you can contact the Embassy of the United States in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, (American Citizens Services Unit office hours are 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Consular Section is closed on U.S. and local holidays.):

Boulevard du 15 October, Tabarre 41, Tabarre, Haiti
Telephone: (509) (2) 229-8000
Facsimile: (509) (2) 229-8027
Email: acspap@state.gov


View the original article here

UPDATE: CDC Responds to Cholera Outbreak in Haiti

St. Marc’s Hospital, where the most seriously ill patients have been triaged to clinicians and others wait to be seen

CDC is working closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners in support of the Haitian government’s response to the cholera outbreak in that country. CDC is collaborating with the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Pan American Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund, and a host of other organizations to assist the Haiti Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) in a concerted effort to control the outbreak.

For more information about the outbreak in Haiti and about cholera in general, see


View the original article here

NEW: CDC Press Release: Press Release: Laboratory Test Results of Cholera Outbreak Strain in Haiti Announced

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI — The Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population has received the results of laboratory testing showing that the cholera strain linked to the current outbreak in Haiti is most similar to cholera strains found in South Asia. More information about this strain, including the possibility that it might be found in other regions of the world, is anticipated from additional studies. The findings were reported as part of laboratory collaboration between the National Public Health Laboratory (NPHL) in Haiti and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta.

The rapid identification of the outbreak strain as Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa and antimicrobial susceptibility profiles were reported last week by the NPHL. The new findings from CDC's laboratory are based on a method of "DNA fingerprinting" called pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), which analyzes DNA patterns that can then be compared with PFGE patterns of cholera strains from other regions of the world. The PFGE testing was performed on 13 bacterial isolates recovered from patients with cholera in Haiti. The PFGE analysis shows that these isolates are identical, indicating that they are the same strain and similar to a cholera strain found in South Asia.

The lab findings are not unexpected and provide information about the relatedness of the cholera outbreak strain to strains found elsewhere in the world.

"Although these results indicate that the strain is non-Haitian, cholera strains may move between different areas due to global travel and trade," said Minister of Health Dr. Alex Larsen. "Therefore, we will never know the exact origin of the strain that is causing the epidemic in Haiti. This strain was transmitted by contaminated food or water or an infected person."

Global travel and trade provide many opportunities for infectious diseases such as cholera to spread from one country to another. In most instances, cholera does not spread widely within a country if drinking water and sewage treatment are adequate. When water and sewage treatment is inadequate, as in post-earthquake Haiti, cholera can spread rapidly.

Current preventive measures being used to control the outbreak include treating ill people with oral rehydration solution, providing access to safe water, and encouraging good hygiene and sanitation practices. The Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population is leading a response that prioritizes measures to protect families at the community level, strengthen primary health care centers already operating across the nation, and establish a network of special cholera treatment centers and designated hospitals for treatment of severe cases.

In the coming weeks, additional laboratory testing, including whole genome DNA sequencing will be conducted, but investigating officials note that such testing may never fully explain how cholera was introduced into Haiti.

"Our primary focus here is to save lives and control the spread of disease," said CDC medical epidemiologist Dr. Jordan Tappero, who is leading the CDC cholera response team in Haiti. "We realize that it's also important to understand how infectious agents move to new countries. However, we may never know the actual origin of this cholera strain."

CDC, in collaboration with the U.S. government through U.S. Agency for International Development, is assisting the government of Haiti, the Pan American Health Organization, and several other international health agencies in this outbreak.

###
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES


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NEW: Travelers' Health - Outbreak Notice, Cholera in Haiti


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NEW: PDF Posters translations of Defeating Cholera: Clinical Presentation and Management for Haiti Cholera Outbreak, 2010

Rapid high-volume rehydration will save livesMany patients can be rehydrated entirely with oral rehydration solution (ORS)Even if the patient gets intravenous (IV) rehydration, he/she should start drinking ORS as soon as he/she is able

Most persons infected with the cholera bacterium have mild diarrhea or no symptoms at all. Only about 7% of persons infected with Vibrio cholerae O1 have illness requiring treatment at a health center.

Cholera patients should be evaluated and treated quickly. With proper treatment, even severely ill patients can be saved. Prompt restoration of lost fluids and salts is the primary goal of treatment.

Watch "Defeating Cholera" video.

Symptoms of Moderate or Severe CholeraProfuse, watery diarrheaVomitingLeg crampsSigns and Symptoms of DehydrationSome dehydrationSevere dehydrationRestlessness and irritabilitySunken eyesDry mouth and tongueIncreased thirstSkin goes back slowly when pinchedDecreased urineInfants: decreased tears, depressed fontanelsLethargy or unconsciousnessVery dry mouth and tongueSkin goes back very slowly when pinched (“tenting”)Weak or absent pulseLow blood pressureMinimal or no urine

Dehydrated patients who can sit up and drink should be given oral rehydration salts
(ORS) solution immediately and be encouraged to drink. It is important to offer ORS
solution frequently, measure the amount drunk, and measure the fluid lost as diarrhea
and vomitus. Patients who vomit should be given small, frequent sips of ORS solution,
or ORS solution by nasogastric tube. ORS solution should be made with safe water. Safe
water means the water has been boiled or treated with a chlorine product or household
bleach.

Guidelines for treating patients with some dehydration Approximate amount of ORS solution to give in the first 4 hours to patients with some dehydration. Use the patient’s age only when you do not know the weight:The approximate amount of ORS (in milliliters) can also be calculated by multiplying the patient’s weight in kg by 75.A rough estimate of oral rehydration rate for older children and adults is 100 ml ORS every five minutes, until the patient stabilizes. If the patient requests more than the prescribed ORS solution, give more.For Infants: Encourage the mother to continue breast-feeding.

1. The volumes and time shown are guidelines based on usual needs. If necessary, amount and frequency can be increased, or the ORS solution can be given at the same rate for a longer period to achieve adequate rehydration. Similarly, the amount of fluid can be decreased if hydration is achieved earlier than expected.
2. During the initial stages of therapy, while still dehydrated, adults can consume as much as 1000 ml of ORS solution per hour, if necessary, and children as much as 20 ml/kg body weight per hour.
3. Reassess the patient after 1 hour of therapy and then every 1 to 2 hours until rehydration is complete.
4. Resume feeding with a normal diet when vomiting has stopped.

Patients with severe dehydration, stupor, coma, uncontrollable vomiting, or extreme fatigue that prevents drinking should be rehydrated intravenously.

Plain glucose (dextrose) solution

*Acceptable in emergency, but does not correct acidosis and may worsen electrolyte imbalance.

Guidelines for treating patients
with severe dehydration
Start intravenous fluids (IV) immediately. If the patient can drink,
give ORS solution by mouth while the IV drip is set up.
Give 100 ml/kg Ringer’s Lactate Solution divided as follows:AgeFirst give 30 ml/kg IV in:Then give 70 ml/kg IV in:

* Repeat once if radial pulse is still very weak or not detectable.

Reassess the patient every 1-2 hours and continue hydrating. If hydration is not improving, give the IV drip more rapidly. 200ml/kg or more may be needed during the first 24 hours of treatment.Also give ORS solution (about 5 ml/kg per hour) as soon as the patient can drink.After 6 hours (infants) or 3 hours (older patients), perform a full reassessment. Switch to ORS solution if hydration is improved and the patient can drink.Skin goes back normally when pinchedThirst has subsidedUrine has been passedPulse is strong

An antibiotic given orally will reduce the volume and duration of diarrhea. Treatment with antibiotics is recommended for moderately and severely ill patients, particularly for those patients who continue to pass large volume of stools during rehydration treatment, and including all patients who are hospitalized.  Do not give antibiotics to asymptomatic persons. Zinc given orally can reduce the duration of most infectious diarrhea in children. No drugs should be given for treatment of diarrhea or vomiting besides antibiotics and zinc.

Appropriate oral antibiotics (give one of these) ** ALL BY MOUTH** These recommendations are based on the antibiotic resistance profile of V. cholerae isolates from the Haiti cholera outbreak, as reported on December 14, 2010, and local drug availability. Multiple first choice and second choice options are presented. Selection of antibiotics should be based on individual case consideration and available medications.Patient classificationFirst choiceSecond choiceDoxycycline: 300 mg by mouth in one doseAzithromycin:1 gram in a single dose

Tetracycline: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Erythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Azithromycin: 1 gram in one doseErythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren =12 months old and capable of swallowing pills and/or tablesAzithromycin: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren <12 months old and others unable to swallow pills and/or tabletsAzithromycin oral suspension: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin oral suspension: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline oral suspension: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline oral suspension: 12.5mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

* Doxycycline is safe for treatment of cholera in children at the recommended dose. The Pan American Health Organization recommends doxycycline as a second-line choice because of limited regional availability and to avoid future overuse in children.

Zinc supplementation significantly reduces the severity and duration of most childhood diarrhea caused by infection. When available, supplementation (10-20 mg zinc per day) should be started immediately.


View the original article here

UPDATE: CDC Responds to Cholera Outbreak in Haiti

St. Marc’s Hospital, where the most seriously ill patients have been triaged to clinicians and others wait to be seen

CDC is working closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners in support of the Haitian government’s response to the cholera outbreak in that country. CDC is collaborating with the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Pan American Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund, and a host of other organizations to assist the Haiti Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) in a concerted effort to control the outbreak.

For more information about the outbreak in Haiti and about cholera in general, see


View the original article here

UPDATE: Frequently Asked Questions About the Haiti Cholera Outbreak

Beginning in mid-May, the Haitian Ministry of Health surveillance and reports from PAHO and other partners indicated an upsurge in cholera cases and deaths in some parts of Haiti. These cases have been primarily seen in the Departments of South-East, Grand-Anse, South and West. As of May 29, 2011, there have been 321,066 cases and 5,337 deaths and the cumulative case fatality rate is 1.6%.

The prevention steps are the same now as they have been since the original outbreak of cholera in Haiti in fall 2010: Drink and use safe water. Wash your hands often with soap and safe water. If no soap is available, scrub hands often with ash or sand and rinse with safe water. Use latrines or bury feces. Do not defecate in any body of water. Cook food well, keep it covered, eat it hot, and peel fruits and vegetables. Clean up safely—in the kitchen and in places where the family bathes and washes clothes. For more information see: Five Basic Cholera Prevention Messages

The outbreak of cholera was confirmed in Haiti on October 21, 2010.

Although we can’t be certain, experience from the Peru outbreak in the early 1990s and from other countries in Latin America suggests that we should expect to identify additional cases for many months to several years.

No, the current outbreak is not a result of the January 2010 earthquake. Outbreaks of epidemic cholera have not been documented in Haiti before or anywhere in the Caribbean since the mid-nineteenth century. For a cholera outbreak to occur, two conditions have to be met: (1) there must be significant breaches in the water, sanitation, and hygiene infrastructure used by groups of people, permitting large-scale exposure to food or water contaminated with Vibrio cholerae organisms; and (2) cholera must be present in the population. While it is unclear how cholera was introduced to Haiti, both of these conditions now exist.

Cholera is an acute, diarrheal illness caused by infection of the intestine with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. The infection is often mild or without symptoms, but sometimes it can be severe.

Cholera infection is often mild or without symptoms, but can sometimes be severe.  In severe cases, the infected person may experience profuse watery diarrhea, vomiting, and leg cramps, which can cause rapid loss of body fluids and lead to dehydration and shock.  Without treatment, death can occur within hours.

A person can get cholera by drinking water or eating food contaminated with the cholera bacterium. In an epidemic, the source of the contamination is usually the feces of an infected person that contaminates the food and/or water.  The disease can rapidly spread in areas with inadequate treatment of sewage and drinking water, such as Haiti.  However, at this time the origin of this outbreak is unknown and CDC hopes to learn more in the course of its response to this outbreak.

Person-to-person transmission is extremely rare, even to healthcare workers during epidemics. Drinking water and food contaminated with Vibrio cholerae from the feces of an infected person is the most common source of cholera infections.

Cholera can be treated by immediately replacing fluids and salts lost through diarrhea using oral rehydration solution. This solution is used throughout the world to treat diarrhea. Antibiotics may also be used to shorten the course and diminish the severity of the illness. However, they are not as important as receiving oral or intravenous rehydration therapy.

Cholera is found naturally in the environment in many areas around the world and can move from place to place via contaminated water or food, or infected people.

Cholera can be prevented by both visitors and residents of Haiti by following the Five Basic Cholera Prevention Messages:

Drink and use safe water* Bottled water with unbroken seals and canned/bottled carbonated beverages are safe to drink and use Use safe water to brush your teeth, wash and prepare food, and to make ice Clean food preparation areas and kitchenware with soap and safe water and let dry completely before reuse *Piped water sources, drinks sold in cups or bags, or ice may not be safe and should be boiled or treated with chlorine.

To be sure water is safe to drink and use: Boil it or treat it with a chlorine product or household bleach If boiling, bring your water to a complete boil for at least 1 minute To treat your water with chlorine, use one of the locally available treatment products and follow the instructions If a chlorine treatment product is not available, you can treat your water with household bleach. Add 8 drops of household bleach for every 1 gallon of water (or 2 drops of household bleach for every 1 liter of water) and wait 30 minutes before drinking Always store your treated water in a clean, covered container Wash your hands often with soap and safe water* Before you eat or prepare food Before feeding your children After using the latrine or toilet After cleaning your child’s bottom After taking care of someone ill with diarrhea * If no soap is available, scrub hands often with ash or sand and rinse with safe water. Use latrines or bury your feces (poop); do not defecate in any body of water Use latrines or other sanitation systems, like chemical toilets, to dispose of feces Wash hands with soap and safe water after defecating Clean latrines and surfaces contaminated with feces using a solution of 1 part household bleach to 9 parts water What if I don’t have a latrine or chemical toilet? Defecate at least 30 meters away from any body of water and then bury your feces Dispose of plastic bags containing feces in latrines, at collection points if available, or bury it in the ground. Do not put plastic bags in chemical toilets Dig new latrines or temporary pit toilets at least a half-meter deep and at least 30 meters away from any body of water Cook food well (especially seafood), keep it covered, eat it hot, and peel fruits and vegetables* Boil it, Cook it, Peel it, or Leave it Be sure to cook shellfish (like crabs and crayfish) until they are very hot all the way through *Avoid raw foods other than fruits and vegetables you have peeled yourself. Clean up safely—in the kitchen and in places where the family bathes and washes clothes Wash yourself, your children, diapers, and clothes, 30 meters away from drinking water sources

In the United States, cholera was prevalent in the 1800s but water-related spread has been eliminated by modern water and sewage treatment systems.  However, U.S. travelers to areas with epidemic cholera (for example, parts of Africa, Asia, or Latin America) may be exposed to the cholera bacterium.  Additionally, travelers may bring contaminated seafood back to the United States, which can result in foodborne outbreaks of cholera.

At this time, CDC does not recommend cholera vaccines for travelers since their risk of contracting the disease is extremely low. For cholera vaccine to be effective, people need two doses, and it takes time for vaccinated people to become immune. Multiple weeks can elapse before they are protected following vaccination. Since most people travel for a short period of time, the vaccine is not recommended. Basic hygiene precautions should always be taken.

Information can be accessed on CDC’s Travelers’ Health Website as well as the CDC Cholera Website.

CDC, in collaboration with the US government led by USAID, is assisting the government of Haiti, PAHO and several other international health agencies in responding to the cholera outbreak. There are several laboratory tests in progress in CDC labs, including a variety of molecular tests, which will help determine the genetic connections between the bacterial isolates from the Haiti outbreak and other strains around the world. CDC will continue to gather information about outbreak strains for comparison to other known cholera strains. However, the most important goals right now are to save lives and reduce the spread of disease  in Haiti.


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MMWR: Cholera Outbreak --- Haiti, November 19, 2010

Please note: An erratum has been published for this article. To view the erratum, please click here.

On October 19, 2010, the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) was notified of unusually high numbers of patients from Artibonite and Centre departments who had acute watery diarrhea and dehydration, in some cases leading to death. Within 4 days, the National Public Health Laboratory (LNSP) in Haiti isolated Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa, from stool specimens obtained from patients in the affected areas by an investigation team from MSPP and CDC Haiti. This report describes the investigation of the initial cases, the ongoing outbreak of cholera in Haiti, and initial control measures. Since the initial identification of cholera, the outbreak has expanded to include cases in seven of Haiti's 10 departments and the capital city of Port-au-Prince. As of November 13, MSPP had reported 16,111 persons hospitalized with acute watery diarrhea and 992 cholera deaths, 620 of which occurred among hospitalized patients. Prevention and control measures implemented by MSPP with assistance from governmental and nongovernmental partners include 1) providing better access to treated drinking water; 2) providing education on improvement of sanitation, hygiene, and food preparation practices; 3) advising ill persons to begin using oral rehydration solution immediately and seek health care at the onset of watery diarrhea; 4) enhancing cholera treatment capacity at existing health-care institutions; and 5) establishing cholera treatment centers.

Initial Epidemiologic Investigation

During October 21--23, an investigation was conducted by MSPP and CDC Haiti at five hospitals in Artibonite Department. The first patients with diarrhea and severe dehydration were admitted to these hospitals on October 19. During October 20--22, the majority of patients at these hospitals with diarrhea and severe dehydration were aged >5 years, and the majority of the patients at these hospitals who died were aged >5 years, suggesting that the outbreak might be caused by cholera.

On October 19 and 20, stool specimens from patients in health facilities in Artibonite and Centre departments were brought to LNSP, where rapid tests on eight specimens were positive for V. cholerae O1. LNSP identified V. cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa, from three specimens on October 22. Following confirmation of cholera, hospital staff members and public health authorities advised community members, including patients and their families, to boil or chlorinate their water before drinking.

During October 21--23, the investigative team used a standardized questionnaire to interview a convenience sample of 27 patients in the five hospitals in Artibonite Department. Most of these patients resided or worked in rice fields in communities located alongside a stretch of the Artibonite River approximately 20 miles (32 kilometers) long (Figure 1). Eighteen (67%) of the 27 hospitalized patients reported consuming untreated water from the river or canals before illness onset; 18 (67%) did not routinely use chlorine for treating water, and 21 (78%) practiced open defecation.

Cholera Surveillance and Laboratory Findings

A suspected case of cholera is defined as profuse, acute watery diarrhea in a patient. A confirmed case of cholera requires laboratory confirmation by culture of V. cholerae. When a department reports a case of laboratory-confirmed cholera, the department is declared "cholera affected." Only reports from cholera-affected departments are tallied and included in the MSPP daily surveillance summaries.

Since the initial identification of cholera in Artibonite and Centre departments, the outbreak has expanded to include cases in five additional departments and the capital city; cases have been reported in seven of 10 departments (Artibonite, Centre, Nord, Nord' Ouest, Nord' Est, Ouest, and Sud) and Port-au-Prince. As of November 13, MSPP had reported 16,111 persons hospitalized with acute watery diarrhea and 992 cholera deaths, 620 of which occurred among hospitalized patients (case-fatality rate among hospitalized patients: 3.8%) (Figure 2). Cases and deaths have been reported primarily from Artibonite department (63% of cases and 62% of deaths).

At LNSP, the outbreak isolates were identified as V. cholerae serotype O1, serogroup Ogawa, and selected specimens were sent to CDC for confirmation and additional analyses. As of November 13, CDC had isolated V. cholerae from 14 specimens received from LNSP. All isolates were identified phenotypically and characterized by serotyping, biotyping, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), performed using a protocol developed by PulseNet International, the international molecular subtyping network for foodborne and waterborne disease surveillance. Additionally, the isolates were characterized genetically for the presence and subtype of certain virulence factors (e.g., the cholera toxin, genes specific for strains associated with the ongoing cholera pandemic, and antimicrobial resistance genes). The 14 isolates associated with the outbreak in Haiti were indistinguishable by all laboratory methods, revealing that the outbreak strain was V. cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa, biotype El Tor, and PulseNet PFGE pattern combination KZGN11.0092/KZGS12.0088. The strain possessed a cholera toxin variant that was first seen in cholera strains of the classical biotype. As of November 13, data indicated that a single strain caused illness among the 14 persons from Artibonite Department. If these isolates are representative of those currently circulating in Haiti, the findings suggest that V. cholerae was likely introduced into Haiti in one event. V. cholerae strains that are indistinguishable from the outbreak strain by all methods used have previously been found in countries in South Asia and elsewhere. PFGE analysis on isolates obtained from cholera patients who became ill in other departments in Haiti is ongoing.

Whole genome sequence (WGS) analysis of three isolates from the current outbreak, and other V. cholerae strains is under way. Comparative WGS analysis is the ultimate discriminatory subtyping tool because it detects any and all genetic difference among isolates. Limited WGS data are available currently for V. cholerae. Comprehensive libraries of V. cholerae genomes from epidemiologically or geographically related and unrelated isolates are needed before the sequence data of the Haiti outbreak strain can be interpreted in the proper epidemiologic context.

A representative outbreak isolate has been deposited into the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) under the strain number BAA- 2163, and the draft genome sequences of the three isolates have been deposited into the GenBank database under the accession numbers AELH00000000, AELI00000000, and AELJ00000000.* Genome sequences will be updated in this database as they become available. Availability of an isolate and WGS of the Haiti outbreak strain as a public resource should facilitate rapid additional characterization by the global scientific community.

Initial antimicrobial susceptibility testing performed at LNSP indicated that all isolates were susceptible to tetracycline (a proxy for doxycycline) but resistant to sulfisoxazole and nalidixic acid. Additional antimicrobial susceptibility testing at CDC on 14 isolates determined that these isolates demonstrated susceptibility to azithromycin, reduced susceptibility to ciprofloxacin, and resistance to furazolidone. Antimicrobial treatment is recommended for severe cholera cases only. Recommended regimens include single-dose doxycycline (for nonpregnant adults and children), azithromycin (for pregnant women and all others), and other antimicrobial agents.†

Prevention and Control Measures

MSPP, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), CDC, and selected health facilities have established national daily cholera surveillance and disseminated educational messages encouraging persons with acute watery diarrhea to use oral rehydration solution (ORS) and seek immediate medical care. MSPP and partners also developed and disseminated messages on cholera prevention encouraging persons to treat drinking water and to improve handwashing, sanitation, food preparation, and cleaning practices.§ Community surveys are under way to ascertain knowledge levels and practices among community members regarding cholera, ORS use, and safe water and sanitation practices, and to determine the need for additional prevention messages. Cholera treatment capacity was enhanced at existing health-care institutions, and new cholera treatment centers were opened with support from the Haitian government and other governmental and nongovernmental partners.

Ministry of Public Health and Population, Haiti. Pan American Health Organization. CDC.

Cholera, a gastrointestinal infection caused by toxigenic V. cholerae serogroup O1 or O139, can cause acute, severe, watery diarrhea, dehydration, and death. Outbreaks of cholera are frequent in Asia and Africa. During the 1990s, multiple countries in Latin America had cholera outbreaks; however, cholera was not reported from the Caribbean during or since that period. No cholera outbreaks have been reported from Haiti in more than a century (1--3). Known risk factors for cholera outbreaks include lack of access to safe drinking water, contaminated food, inadequate sanitation, and large numbers of refugees or internally displaced persons (IDPs).

The cholera outbreak in Haiti underscores the continuing vulnerability of much of the world's population to sudden severe illness and death from cholera. In 2009, a total of 221,226 cases of cholera and 4,946 cholera deaths were reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) from 45 countries; however, the actual number of annual cases is thought to be substantially higher (4). Haiti is the latest country to be affected by the ongoing cholera pandemic, which began 49 years ago in Sulawesi, Indonesia, and has lasted longer and spread farther than any previously known cholera pandemic (5).

Although multiple foods have been implicated as vehicles for cholera transmission, the driving forces in cholera outbreaks are contaminated drinking water and inadequate sanitation. In 2008, 63% of the 9.8 million persons in Haiti had access to an improved drinking water source¶; only 12% received piped, treated water, and only 17% had access to adequate sanitation (6). The earthquake on January 12, 2010, worsened conditions by damaging drinking water treatment facilities and piped water distribution systems, and displaced an estimated 2.3 million Haitians, further increasing the risk for waterborne outbreaks. The initial cholera outbreak investigation suggested that exposure to contaminated water was the likely cause of the initial cases in Artibonite Department. However, a case-control study is under way that will provide additional information about risk factors for illness in Artibonite. In addition, risk factors for illness might change as the outbreak expands over time. Contamination of food by persons who are ill, either via the use of contaminated water or poor food preparation hygiene also can contribute to the spread of disease.

Vigorous efforts to restore public health surveillance and laboratory diagnostic capacity in Haiti after the earthquake enabled rapid detection and identification of V. cholerae by MSPP within a few days of the first case report and determination of the antimicrobial susceptibility of circulating strains followed soon after. The Haitian government immediately declared a public health emergency and has worked closely with international organizations and governmental and nongovernmental partners to raise community awareness of and access to cholera prevention and treatment measures, strengthen staffing and treatment supplies at health centers in affected areas, and support creation of dedicated cholera treatment centers in those areas already affected and in areas not yet affected by cholera. Suspected cases in unaffected areas will be identified and reported to MSPP through enhanced daily surveillance and laboratory testing. As surveillance systems improve and outpatients with cholera are reported, the number of cases identified is likely to increase substantially.

Early administration of ORS is the mainstay of cholera treatment and should begin as soon as symptoms develop, continue while the patient seeks medical care, and be maintained until hydration returns to normal in the health-care facility. ORS, combined with intravenous rehydration for those with severe dehydration, has been shown to reduce case-fatality rates to <1% (7). ORS is available in Haiti, but continued emphasis on maintaining supplies at the local level, dissemination of messages about how to correctly prepare and use ORS at home, and provision of ORS for use in the home, is needed. Health-care facilities in Haiti will need considerable assistance in preparing their facilities to provide the rapid clinical assessment and aggressive rehydration treatment necessary to reduce the risk for death from severe cholera.

The course of the cholera outbreak in Haiti is difficult to predict. The Haitian population has no preexisting immunity to cholera, and environmental conditions in Haiti are favorable for its continued spread. Approximately 1.3 million Haitians remain in IDP camps (8), but the capacity of IDP camps to provide centrally treated drinking water, adequate sanitation, handwashing facilities, and health care varies. The number of cases might be lowered substantially if efforts to reduce transmission are implemented fully (Box), but they also might be increased substantially by delays in implementation, flooding, or other disruptions. Longer-term persistence of V. cholerae in the environment in Haiti and recurrent cholera outbreaks also are possible. After the January 12, 2010, earthquake, intensive efforts to provide safe drinking water and sanitation were made in some areas. Expanding these activities over the coming months and years will be critical to reducing the risk for cholera in Haiti and protecting the Haitian population from other waterborne diseases.

During November 15--16, CDC, MSPP, and the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICCDR,B) launched a 2-day train-the-trainer program in Port-au-Prince to educate health-care providers on cholera treatment and management techniques in Haiti. Master trainers were trained and are now prepared to train additional health-care workers in departments across Haiti in the next few weeks. The train-the-trainer program will expand beyond the persons directly trained by CDC, MSPP, and ICDDR,B to reach a much larger number of Haitians providing health-care to patients in the communities. The train-the-trainer program is designed to improve the standard of care of cholera patients and reduce the number of cholera patients dying from severe dehydration.

Travelers to Haiti are encouraged to take certain basic precautions to reduce their risk for acquiring cholera (9). Further spread of cholera from Haiti to other countries might occur; therefore, cholera surveillance should be enhanced in those areas. Exports from Haiti, including foods, are not likely to pose a risk for cholera transmission. However, CDC discourages travelers from bringing noncommercial, perishable "souvenir seafood" from Haiti to the United States because of the risk for contamination (10).

Pollitzer R, Swaroop S, Burrows W. Cholera. Monogr Ser World Health Organ 1959;58:1001--19.Guerra F. American and Filipino epidemiology, 1492--1898. Madrid, Spain: Ministry of Health and Consumption; 1999.Bordes A. Vol. 2. Médecine et santé publique sous l'occupation Américaine, 1915--1934. In: Évolution des sciences de la santé et de l'hygiène publique en Haïti. Port-au-Prince, Haiti: Centre d'Hygiène Familiale. Imprimerie Deschamps; 1979.World Health Organization. Cholera, 2009. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2010;85:293--308.Wachsmuth IK, Blake PA, Olsvik O, eds. Vibrio cholerae and cholera: molecular to global perspectives. Washington, DC: ASM Press; 1994:293--5.World Health Organization and UNICEF. Progress on sanitation and drinking water: 2010 update. Geneva, Switzerland: WHO Press; 2010. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/publications/9789241563956/en/index.html. Accessed November 16, 2010.Swerdlow DL, Ries AA. Cholera in the Americas: guidelines for the clinician. JAMA 1992;267:1495--9.United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Haiti. Situation report no. 7. October 28, 2010. Available at http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwfiles2010.nsf/filesbyrwdocunidfilename/mmah-8ap826-full_report.pdf/$file/full_report.pdf. Accessed November 16, 2010.CDC. Traveler's health. Outbreak notice: cholera in Haiti. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2010. Available at http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/content/outbreak-notice/haiti-cholera.aspx. Accessed November 16, 2010. Finelli L, Swerdlow D, Mertz K, Ragazzoni H, Spitalny K. Outbreak of cholera associated with crab brought from an area with epidemic disease. J Infect Dis 1992;166:1433--5.
What is already known on this topic?

A cholera outbreak has not been reported from Haiti in more than a century.

What is added by this report?

In October 2010, an outbreak of Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa, biotype El Tor, was reported from Haiti; as of November 13, the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population had reported 16,111 hospitalized cases of acute watery diarrhea and 992 cholera deaths, 620 of which occurred among hospitalized patients. Laboratory data suggest that V. cholerae was likely introduced into Haiti in one event and that the strain is indistinguishable by all methods used from strains circulating in countries in South Asia and elsewhere.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Continued cholera surveillance is required to follow the course of the outbreak and to target resources in areas of greatest need. Cholera treatment and prevention strategies need to be enhanced. Long-term improvements in water and sanitation likely will be needed to control cholera in Haiti. Travelers to Haiti are encouraged to take certain basic precautions to reduce their risk for acquiring cholera.


FIGURE 1. Number of persons hospitalized with cholera, by department* --- Haiti, October 20--November 13, 2010

The figure shows the number of persons hospitalized with cholera (N = 16,111), by department in Haiti during October 20-November 13, 2010. Most of the hospitalizations (10,230) occurred in Artibonite Department.

Alternate Text: The figure above shows the number of persons hospitalized with cholera (N = 16,111), by department in Haiti during October 20-November 13, 2010. Most of the hospitalizations (10,230) occurred in Artibonite Department.


FIGURE 2. Number of persons hospitalized (N=16,111) with cholera and daily hospital case-fatality rate (CFR) --- Haiti, October 20--November 13, 2010

The figure shows the number of persons hospitalized with cholera and the daily hospital case-fatality rate in Haiti, during October 20-November 13, 2010. As of November 13, MSPP had reported 16,111 persons hospitalized with acute watery diarrhea and 992 cholera deaths, of which 620 occurred among hospitalized patients (case-fatality rate among hospitalized patients: 3.8%).

Alternate Text: The figure above shows the number of persons hospitalized with cholera and the daily hospital case-fatality rate in Haiti, during October 20-November 13, 2010. As of November 13, MSPP had reported 16,111 persons hospitalized with acute watery diarrhea and 992 cholera deaths, of which 620 occurred among hospitalized patients (case-fatality rate among hospitalized patients: 3.8%).


BOX. Recommendations for reducing the risk for cholera --- Haiti, 2010*

Drink and use safe water

Piped water sources, drinks sold in cups or bags, or ice might not be safe and should be boiled or treated with chlorine.

Bottled water with unbroken seals and canned/bottled carbonated beverages are safe to drink and use.

Use safe water to brush teeth, wash and prepare food, and to make ice.

Clean food preparation areas and kitchenware with soap and safe water and let dry completely before reuse.

Be sure water is safe to drink and use

Boil it or treat it with a chlorine product or household bleach.

If boiling, bring water to a complete boil for at least 1 minute.

To treat water with chlorine, use one of the locally available treatment products such as Aquatabs, Dlo Lavi, or PuR and follow the instructions.

If a chlorine treatment product is not available, water can be treated with household bleach. Add eight drops of household bleach for every 1 gallon of water (or two drops of household bleach for every 1 liter of water) and wait 30 minutes before drinking.

Always store treated water in a clean, covered container.

Cook food well, keep it covered, eat it hot, and peel fruits and vegetables.

Boil it, cook it, peel it, or leave it.

Be sure to cook seafood, especially shellfish, until it is very hot all the way through.

Avoid raw foods other than fruits and vegetables you have peeled yourself.

Wash hands often with soap and water

Before eating or preparing food.

Before feeding children.

After using the latrine or toilet.

After cleaning a child's bottom.

After taking care of someone ill with diarrhea.

If no soap is available, scrub hands often with ash or sand and rinse with safe water.

Use latrines or bury feces; do not defecate in any body of water.

Use latrines or other sanitation systems, like chemical toilets, to dispose of feces.

Wash hands with soap and safe water after defecating.

Clean latrines and surfaces contaminated with feces using a solution of one part household bleach to 9 parts water.

What if I don't have a latrine or chemical toilet?

Defecate at least 30 meters away from any body of water and then bury the feces.

Dispose of plastic bags containing feces in latrines, at collection points if available, or bury it in the ground. Do not put plastic bags in chemical toilets.

Dig new latrines or temporary pit toilets at least a half-meter deep and at least 30 meters away from any body of water.

Clean up safely, in the kitchen and in places where the family bathes and washes clothes.

Wash yourself, children, diapers, and clothes, 30 meters away from drinking water sources.


Use of trade names and commercial sources is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are provided as a service to MMWR readers and do not constitute or imply endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. CDC is not responsible for the content of pages found at these sites. URL addresses listed in MMWR were current as of the date of publication.

All MMWR HTML versions of articles are electronic conversions from typeset documents. This conversion might result in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users are referred to the electronic PDF version (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr) and/or the original MMWR paper copy for printable versions of official text, figures, and tables. An original paper copy of this issue can be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), Washington, DC 20402-9371; telephone: (202) 512-1800. Contact GPO for current prices.

**Questions or messages regarding errors in formatting should be addressed to mmwrq@cdc.gov.


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New: Dominican Republic Outbreak Notice

Warning - Level 3, Avoid Nonessential TravelAlert - Level 2, Practice Enhanced PrecautionsWatch - Level 1, Practice Usual Precautions

An outbreak of cholera has been ongoing in the Dominican Republic since November 2010. According to the Dominican Ministry of Health (Ministerio de Salud Publica y Asistencia Social [MSP]), 7,860 suspected cholera cases and 66 suspected cholera-related deaths have been reported for all of 2012. As of June 1, a total of 1,016 suspected cholera cases and 19 suspected cholera-related deaths have been reported for 2013.

Cholera is a bacterial disease that can cause diarrhea and dehydration. Cholera is most often spread through the ingestion of contaminated food or drinking water. Water may be contaminated by the feces of an infected person or by untreated sewage. Food is often contaminated by water containing cholera bacteria or by being handled by a person ill with cholera.

Most travelers are not at high risk for getting cholera, but people who are traveling to the Dominican Republic should exercise caution to avoid getting sick.

CDC recommends that all travelers prepare a travel health kit when going abroad. If you are planning travel to the Dominican Republic, CDC advises packing the following supplies in your travel health kit to help prevent cholera and to treat it.

A prescription antibiotic to take in case of diarrheaWater purification tablets*Oral rehydration salts*

*In the United States, these products can be purchased at stores that sell equipment for camping or other outdoor activities.

Although no cholera vaccine is available in the United States, travelers can prevent cholera by following these 5 basic steps:

Bottled water with unbroken seals and canned/bottled carbonated beverages are safe to drink and use.Use safe water to brush your teeth, wash and prepare food, and make ice.Clean food preparation areas and kitchenware with soap and safe water and let dry completely before reuse.

*Piped water sources, drinks sold in cups or bags, or ice may not be safe. All drinking water and water used to make ice should be boiled or treated with chlorine.

To be sure water is safe to drink and use:

Boil it or treat it with water purification tablets, a chlorine product, or household bleach.Bring your water to a complete boil for at least 1 minute.To treat your water, use water purification tablets, if you brought some with you from the United States, or one of the locally available treatment products, and follow the instructions.If a chlorine treatment product is not available, you can treat your water with household bleach. Add 8 drops of household bleach for every 1 gallon of water (or 2 drops of household bleach for every 1 liter of water) and wait 30 minutes before drinking.Always store your treated water in a clean, covered container.Before you eat or prepare foodBefore feeding your childrenAfter using the latrine or toiletAfter cleaning your child’s bottomAfter taking care of someone ill with diarrhea

* If no soap is available, use an alcohol-based hand cleaner (containing at least 60% alcohol).

Use toilets, latrines, or other sanitation systems, like chemical toilets, to dispose of feces.Wash hands with soap and safe water after using toilets or latrines.Clean toilets and surfaces contaminated with feces using a solution of 1 part household bleach to 9 parts water.Boil it, cook it, peel it, or leave it.Be sure to cook shellfish (like crabs and crayfish) until they are very hot all the way through.Do not bring perishable seafood back to the United States.

*Avoid raw foods other than fruits and vegetables you have peeled yourself.

Wash yourself, your children, diapers, and clothes at least 30 meters away from drinking water sources.

Before departing for the Dominican Republic, talk to your doctor about getting a prescription for an antibiotic. If you get sick with diarrhea while you are in the Dominican Republic, you can take the antibiotic, as prescribed. Also, remember to drink fluids and use oral rehydration salts (ORS) to prevent dehydration.

If you have severe watery diarrhea, seek medical care right away.

For more information about traveling to the Dominican Republic and the cholera outbreak in Haiti, visit the following CDC webpages:
Health Information for Travelers to Dominican Republic
CDC Travelers’ Health: Pack Smart
Travel Health Precaution: Cholera in Haiti
2010 Haiti Cholera Outbreak
General Cholera Info


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UPDATE: CDC Responds to Cholera Outbreak in Haiti

St. Marc’s Hospital, where the most seriously ill patients have been triaged to clinicians and others wait to be seen

CDC is working closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners in support of the Haitian government’s response to the cholera outbreak in that country. CDC is collaborating with the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Pan American Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund, and a host of other organizations to assist the Haiti Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) in a concerted effort to control the outbreak.

For more information about the outbreak in Haiti and about cholera in general, see


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NEW: Interim Guidance for Protecting Travelers on Commercial Aircraft Serving Haiti During the Cholera Outbreak


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MMWR: Cholera Outbreak --- Dec 24, 2010 Update: Haiti, Dominican Republic, and Florida

On October 21, 2010, a cholera outbreak was confirmed by the Haitian National Public Health Laboratory (1). By November 19, the outbreak had reached every department of the country, and by December 17, a total of 121,518 cases of cholera, resulting in 63,711 hospitalizations and 2,591 deaths, had been reported. By November 16, additional cases of cholera had been confirmed in the neighboring Dominican Republic and in Florida. Several confirmed cases in the Dominican Republic and all confirmed U.S. cases were among travelers from Haiti. This report describes cases of cholera identified in the Dominican Republic and United States and provides recommendations to physicians regarding management of travel-related cases. Travelers who develop watery diarrhea within 5 days after returning from cholera-affected areas should seek health care and report their travel histories. Clinicians should enquire about recent travel when evaluating patients with diarrhea. When cholera is suspected, rehydration should be initiated immediately, a stool specimen should be collected for culture of Vibrio cholerae, and public health authorities should be notified.

Dominican Republic

In the Dominican Republic, intensive surveillance for cholera-like illness and laboratory testing to confirm cases were initiated by the Ministry of Public Health on October 24, 2010. Suspected cases were defined as profuse watery diarrhea among persons aged =5 years, death in a person with acute watery diarrhea, or diarrhea among persons with an epidemiologic link to a laboratory-confirmed case. Suspected cases were reported to the Ministry's Division of Epidemiology. When possible, rectal swabs were collected from suspected cases, transported in Cary Blair media, and sent to the National Reference Laboratory for confirmation by isolation of V. cholerae and agglutination with V. cholerae O1 antiserum.

Through December 18, a total of 399 suspected cases were reported; laboratory testing was performed for at least 327 of these cases. V. cholerae O1 serotype Ogawa was identified in 59 cases; the majority of negative test results were attributed to other enteric pathogens for which testing is not performed routinely. Three confirmed cases were attributed to importation from Haiti, one each in the provinces of La Altagracia, Independencia and Monte Cristi. The remaining 56 confirmed cases occurred in the provinces of Santiago (19), San Juan (11), Elías Piña (10), Santo Domingo (10), Dajabón (two), Valverde (two), Independencia (one), and Monte Cristi (one). These 56 cases, with no known association with travel from Haiti, were attributed to local transmission (Figure). Of the 59 confirmed cases, 46 (78%) resulted in hospitalization; no fatalities have been confirmed.

Three separate outbreaks of cholera, involving 19 of the 59 confirmed cases, were identified and investigated in the Dominican Republic. In El Dique, a resource-poor neighborhood in the capital city of Santo Domingo, eight cases of cholera-like illness, including six confirmed cholera cases, were identified in two households; investigation suggested household transmission, although the vehicle of transmission was not determined. In a second outbreak in Navarrete, Santiago Province, preliminary investigation suggested that contaminated canal water was the source of infection for 29 cases of cholera-like illness (six confirmed). A third outbreak in Bánica, Elías Piña Province, occurred in a community along the banks of the Artibonite River near the Haitian border and resulted in nine cases (seven confirmed); drinking untreated river water was considered the most likely source of infection.

United States

In the United States, cholera is a nationally notifiable disease. A confirmed case of cholera is defined by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists as a clinically compatible illness in a person from whom toxigenic V. cholerae O1 or O139 has been isolated from stool or vomitus, or who has serologic evidence of recent infection.* After the outbreak was confirmed in Haiti, to encourage early reporting of suspected cholera cases without waiting for laboratory confirmation, the Florida Department of Health created two working case classifications for surveillance purposes.† A probable case was defined as a clinically compatible illness in a person with a stool culture that yielded Vibrio species and who recently traveled to Haiti or another affected area or who was linked epidemiologically to a confirmed case. A suspected case was defined as a clinically compatible illness in a person who recently traveled to Haiti or another affected area or who was linked epidemiologically to a confirmed case, but whose stool culture or serology results were pending. Case reporting guidelines were distributed to county health departments, and clinician advisories were developed and distributed.

As of December 18, a total of 13 cases had been investigated by the Florida Department of Health. V. cholerae O1 serotype Ogawa was isolated from stool specimens of five patients at Florida laboratories. All five developed symptoms during October 23--November 29, either while in Haiti or on the day of arrival in Florida from Haiti. The five patients with confirmed cases ranged in age from 9 to 84 years; four were female. One patient reported using community well water in Haiti for drinking and bathing, one had eaten several meals in family homes in Haiti, and one was a physician who had treated cholera patients in Haiti but might have had other exposures. In addition to diarrhea, reported symptoms included abdominal pain or cramping, vomiting, and lethargy or weakness.

Four of the five patients were hospitalized, including two who had been evaluated in an emergency department, discharged the same day, and readmitted 2--3 days later. A history of recent travel from Haiti had not been elicited on the first emergency department visit for one of those patients. All five patients with confirmed cholera received intravenous rehydration and oral antibiotics, including single doses of doxycycline or ciprofloxacin or multiday courses of doxycycline, tetracycline, azithromycin, or ciprofloxacin; three patients received two different antibiotics. Some treatment regimens were not consistent with recommendations. No secondary transmission was identified.

Characterization of Isolates

Isolates from four confirmed cases in the Dominican Republic and all five Florida cases were sent to CDC for confirmation and additional characterization. All were confirmed as toxigenic V. cholerae O1, serotype Ogawa, biotype El Tor, and matched the Haiti outbreak strain by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (2). Those isolates from Florida cases had the same antimicrobial susceptibility pattern as the Haiti outbreak strain (pending for Dominican Republic isolates). CDC's laboratory assessment of 380 cholera isolates subtyped since 2005 has indicated that isolates from the cases in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Florida are most similar to a strain previously characterized from South Asia and elsewhere.

PH Jenkins, MPH, HJ Montejano, MS, Broward County Health Dept; MJ Abbasi, MD, MS Crowley, MS, MG O'Brien, Collier County Health Dept; V Conte, MD, M Etienne, MPH, E Rico, MPH, Miami-Dade County Health Dept; DG Rea, MPH, Orange County Health Dept; RM Baker, MS, EA Burden, LD Gillis, PhD, JJ Hamilton, MPH, RS Hopkins, MD, AC Kite-Powell, MS, E Merlo, Florida Dept of Health. Ministry of Public Health, Dominican Republic. Ministry of Public Health and Population, Haiti. Pan American Health Organization. CDC.

Less than 4 weeks after the Haitian National Public Health Laboratory first confirmed cholera in Haiti and before cholera had been identified in all 10 Haitian departments, confirmed cases were reported in the neighboring Dominican Republic and in a resident of Florida who had traveled to Haiti. Transnational spread of cholera is not uncommon. In late January 1991, an outbreak of cholera began in Peru and, by 1992, had spread to most other countries in Central and South America and to the United States (3). During 2000--2008, of 51 cholera cases in the United States reported to CDC, 29 (57%) were associated with international travel.§

Although transnational spread of cholera is caused most commonly by importation by travelers, it also has been associated with contaminated food that was imported commercially (4) or transported by travelers (5). Toxigenic V. cholerae also can be transported by ships' ballast water (6).

Travel between Haiti and other countries predominantly involves those countries where most expatriate Haitians reside (7). In November, of approximately 60,000 airline passenger seats available on direct flights from Haiti, 76% were on flights to the United States and U.S. territories, 17% to the Dominican Republic and other Caribbean islands, 4% to France, 2% to Canada, and 2% to Panama.¶ Substantial travel also occurs across the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

More cholera cases associated with the current outbreak in Haiti are expected. In preparation for an anticipated increase in holiday travel, public health authorities in countries receiving travelers from Haiti should consider the need to heighten surveillance for cholera and educate clinicians to be vigilant for cholera-like illness in patients who have traveled from cholera-affected areas. CDC is distributing Travel Health Alert Notices to travelers from Haiti to the United States, advising them to seek health care promptly if they develop diarrhea within 5 days after arrival.

Although the risk for acquiring cholera during travel is low (8), travelers can reduce their risk for cholera and other enteric infections by drinking and using water that has been boiled or treated or is supplied in cans or bottles, eating only food that has been cooked and served hot, paying vigorous attention to handwashing with soap, and avoiding swimming or bathing in rivers. Health-care providers and persons traveling to Haiti or other cholera-affected countries should consult CDC,** World Health Organization (WHO),†† or Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)§§ websites for general information about international travel and for specific information related to cholera. Neither cholera vaccine nor chemoprophylaxis is indicated for U.S. travelers to Haiti. CDC, the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population, PAHO, and other organizations are evaluating the potential role of cholera vaccines for populations in Haiti and other countries.

Physicians evaluating patients with diarrhea should obtain a travel history. If cholera is suspected, clinicians should initiate rehydration, treat hospitalized patients with antibiotics, obtain a stool specimen for culture before starting antibiotic treatment (if indicated), and report the case to public health authorities. The risk for person-to-person transmission is low, and isolation of cholera patients or quarantine of asymptomatic travelers from affected areas is not warranted. However, persons in sensitive occupations, such as food preparation, child care or health care, should not work while they have diarrhea.

The mainstay of cholera treatment is vigorous oral or intravenous rehydration. Antibiotics can reduce the volume and duration of diarrhea and should be given to hospitalized patients. A single dose of doxycycline by mouth (300 mg for nonpregnant adults; 2--4 mg/kg for children, not to exceed 300 mg) is the preferred regimen. A single dose of azithromycin (1 g by mouth) is recommended for pregnant women. Alternative therapies and additional guidance for clinicians are available from CDC¶¶ and PAHO.

The Florida Department of Health provided advisories to clinicians, prompting correct referral of specimens to clinical laboratories. Because Vibrio species require special media for isolation, the laboratory should be notified to suspect cholera. Specific information on V. cholerae culture methods and specimen transport can be found at CDC's cholera website.*** In the United States, all suspected cholera isolates should be sent to state public health laboratories and from there to CDC for confirmation and additional characterization.

The potential for secondary transmission of cholera is low in countries where sanitation, water, and food production systems minimize the risk for fecal contamination. Only two instances of secondary transmission in the United States have been reported since 1965 (8,9). Spread within the Dominican Republic has been limited to date, as is typical in countries with improved water and sanitation infrastructure.††† Nonetheless, the risk for secondary and ongoing transmission of cholera remains high in populations with limited access to improved water sources and sanitation.

An increase in reported cases of cholera associated with holiday travel to cholera-affected areas is anticipated in the United States and other countries. Travelers are encouraged to take precautions, and providers should suspect cholera in patients with diarrhea and recent travel to cholera-affected areas. All suspected cases should be reported to public health authorities, and stool samples should be collected under appropriate conditions to increase the yield of V. cholerae. In 2009, 45 countries reported 221,226 cases of cholera to WHO (10). The persistence of cholera in any country puts other countries at risk. Until cholera is controlled around the world, importations to other countries probably will continue, and areas with poor water and sanitation infrastructure will be at risk for transmission. Public health authorities in unaffected countries should be vigilant in monitoring for cholera introductions and take public health actions to prevent its spread.

CDC. Update: outbreak of cholera---Haiti, 2010. MMWR 2010;59:1586--90.CDC. Update: cholera outbreak---Haiti, 2010. MMWR 2010;59;1473--9.CDC. Update: Vibrio cholerae O1---Western Hemisphere, 1991--1994, and V. cholerae O139---Asia, 1994. MMWR 1995;44:215--9. Taylor JL, Tuttle J, Pramukul T, et al. An outbreak of cholera in Maryland associated with imported commercial frozen fresh coconut milk. J Infect Dis 1993;167:1330--5.Finelli L, Swerdlow D, Mertz K, Ragazzoni H, Spitalny K. Outbreak of cholera associated with crab brought from an area with epidemic disease. J Infect Dis 1992;166:1433--5.McCarthy SA, Khambaty FM. International dissemination of epidemic Vibrio cholerae by cargo ship ballast and other nonpotable waters. Appl Environ Microbiol 1994;60:2597--601.Pan American Health Organization. Haiti. In: Health in the Americas. Volume II-countries. Pan American Health Organization; 2007:412--29. Available at http://www.paho.org/hia/archivosvol2/paisesing/haiti%20english.pdf.Weber JT, Levine WC, Hopkins DP, Tauxe RV. Cholera in the United States, 1965--1991. Risks at home and abroad. Arch Intern Med 1994;154:551--6.Ackers M, Pagaduan R, Hart G, et al. Cholera and sliced fruit: probable secondary transmission from an asymptomatic carrier in the United States. Int J Infect Dis 1997;1:212--4.World Health Organization. Cholera, 2009. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2010;85:293--308.

What is already known on this topic?

A cholera outbreak has spread rapidly through Haiti since October 2010. Transnational spread of cholera is not uncommon.

What is added by this report?

Cholera has now been confirmed in the Dominican Republic and Florida, and the strains are indistinguishable from the strain causing the outbreak in Haiti. Secondary spread in the Dominican Republic has been limited to date; in the United States, no transmission to household contacts has been reported.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Additional cases of cholera in travelers from Haiti are likely to occur in the United States, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere. Clinicians should ask patients with diarrhea about their travel history. If cholera is suspected, clinicians should initiate rehydration, treat hospitalized patients with antibiotics, obtain a stool specimen for culture before starting antibiotic treatment (if indicated), and report the case to public health authorities.


FIGURE. Confirmed cholera cases (N = 59), by province --- Dominican Republic, 2010*

The figure shows confirmed cholera cases (N = 59), by province in the Dominican Republic in 2010. Three confirmed cases were attributed to importation from Haiti, one each in the provinces of La Altagracia, Independencia and Monte Cristi. The remaining 56 confirmed cases, with no known association with travel from Haiti, have been attributed to local transmission.

Alternate Text: The figure above shows confirmed cholera cases (N = 59), by province in the Dominican Republic in 2010. Three confirmed cases were attributed to importation from Haiti, one each in the provinces of La Altagracia, Independencia and Monte Cristi. The remaining 56 confirmed cases, with no known association with travel from Haiti, have been attributed to local transmission.


Use of trade names and commercial sources is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are provided as a service to MMWR readers and do not constitute or imply endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. CDC is not responsible for the content of pages found at these sites. URL addresses listed in MMWR were current as of the date of publication.

All MMWR HTML versions of articles are electronic conversions from typeset documents. This conversion might result in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users are referred to the electronic PDF version (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr) and/or the original MMWR paper copy for printable versions of official text, figures, and tables. An original paper copy of this issue can be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), Washington, DC 20402-9371; telephone: (202) 512-1800. Contact GPO for current prices.

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View the original article here

New: 2010 Haiti Cholera Outbreak Widget

Place this widget on you website, portal home page, or in your blog to link you and your visitors to CDC's 2010 Haiti Cholera Outbreak website.


View the original article here

NEW: CDC Press Release: Outbreak of Cholera in Haiti: Family and Friends Traveling to Haiti Should Take Precautions While Celebrating All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day This Year

As many Haitian-Americans go to Haiti to visit family and friends to celebrate All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reminds travelers to take precautions to protect themselves from cholera, which has been spreading in Haiti since October 21.

Cholera causes severe diarrhea and can result in life-threatening loss of fluids from the body. Without proper care, a person can die within hours. Cholera can be treated by immediate replacement of the fluids and salts lost through diarrhea. Antibiotics can also shorten the course and diminish the severity of the illness.

People most often get cholera by drinking water or eating food that has cholera germs in it. Water can be contaminated with the feces of a person sick with cholera. Food can be contaminated by water that has cholera germs in it or if it has been prepared or handled by a person sick with cholera.

CDC offers these tips to travelers: Pack water purification tablets or other supplies to make your own safe water for drinking.Eat food that is thoroughly cooked and hot.Wash your hands often with soap and safe water.Wash yourself, your children, diapers, and clothes away from drinking water sources.Use latrines, or sanitation systems like chemical toilets, to dispose of feces. If you don't have access to a latrine or chemical toilet, defecate away from any water source and then bury the feces.Pack oral rehydration salts to use if you get sick with diarrhea, and use safe water to make your oral rehydration solution.

If you have watery diarrhea, you should go to a clinic immediately. You should also start drinking liquids with oral rehydration salts, also called ORS, immediately, if they are available. Try to sip ORS solution every few minutes as long as you have diarrhea. If you do not have ORS, sip safe water and seek medical care and ORS solution immediately. Safe water is water that has been boiled, or has been treated with chlorine.

CDC strongly advises that travelers should not bring perishable seafood back to the United States from Haiti because seafood may be contaminated with cholera germs.

If you get watery diarrhea within five days of returning from Haiti, seek medical care right away. Replacing the water and salt lost from your body is the most important part of cholera treatment. Do not travel again until you are well.

For more information and tips about traveling to Haiti, visit www.cdc.gov/haiticholera.

###
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES


View the original article here

NEW: Defeating Cholera: Clinical Presentation and Management for Haiti Cholera Outbreak, 2010

Rapid high-volume rehydration will save livesMany patients can be rehydrated entirely with oral rehydration solution (ORS)Even if the patient gets intravenous (IV) rehydration, he/she should start drinking ORS as soon as he/she is able

Most persons infected with the cholera bacterium have mild diarrhea or no symptoms at all. Only about 7% of persons infected with Vibrio cholerae O1 have illness requiring treatment at a health center.

Cholera patients should be evaluated and treated quickly. With proper treatment, even severely ill patients can be saved. Prompt restoration of lost fluids and salts is the primary goal of treatment.

Watch "Defeating Cholera" video.

Symptoms of Moderate or Severe CholeraProfuse, watery diarrheaVomitingLeg crampsSigns and Symptoms of DehydrationSome dehydrationSevere dehydrationRestlessness and irritabilitySunken eyesDry mouth and tongueIncreased thirstSkin goes back slowly when pinchedDecreased urineInfants: decreased tears, depressed fontanelsLethargy or unconsciousnessVery dry mouth and tongueSkin goes back very slowly when pinched (“tenting”)Weak or absent pulseLow blood pressureMinimal or no urine

Dehydrated patients who can sit up and drink should be given oral rehydration salts
(ORS) solution immediately and be encouraged to drink. It is important to offer ORS
solution frequently, measure the amount drunk, and measure the fluid lost as diarrhea
and vomitus. Patients who vomit should be given small, frequent sips of ORS solution,
or ORS solution by nasogastric tube. ORS solution should be made with safe water. Safe
water means the water has been boiled or treated with a chlorine product or household
bleach.

Guidelines for treating patients with some dehydration Approximate amount of ORS solution to give in the first 4 hours to patients with some dehydration. Use the patient’s age only when you do not know the weight:The approximate amount of ORS (in milliliters) can also be calculated by multiplying the patient’s weight in kg by 75.A rough estimate of oral rehydration rate for older children and adults is 100 ml ORS every five minutes, until the patient stabilizes. If the patient requests more than the prescribed ORS solution, give more.For Infants: Encourage the mother to continue breast-feeding.

1. The volumes and time shown are guidelines based on usual needs. If necessary, amount and frequency can be increased, or the ORS solution can be given at the same rate for a longer period to achieve adequate rehydration. Similarly, the amount of fluid can be decreased if hydration is achieved earlier than expected.
2. During the initial stages of therapy, while still dehydrated, adults can consume as much as 1000 ml of ORS solution per hour, if necessary, and children as much as 20 ml/kg body weight per hour.
3. Reassess the patient after 1 hour of therapy and then every 1 to 2 hours until rehydration is complete.
4. Resume feeding with a normal diet when vomiting has stopped.

Patients with severe dehydration, stupor, coma, uncontrollable vomiting, or extreme fatigue that prevents drinking should be rehydrated intravenously.

Plain glucose (dextrose) solution

*Acceptable in emergency, but does not correct acidosis and may worsen electrolyte imbalance.

Guidelines for treating patients
with severe dehydration
Start intravenous fluids (IV) immediately. If the patient can drink,
give ORS solution by mouth while the IV drip is set up.
Give 100 ml/kg Ringer’s Lactate Solution divided as follows:AgeFirst give 30 ml/kg IV in:Then give 70 ml/kg IV in:

* Repeat once if radial pulse is still very weak or not detectable.

Reassess the patient every 1-2 hours and continue hydrating. If hydration is not improving, give the IV drip more rapidly. 200ml/kg or more may be needed during the first 24 hours of treatment.Also give ORS solution (about 5 ml/kg per hour) as soon as the patient can drink.After 6 hours (infants) or 3 hours (older patients), perform a full reassessment. Switch to ORS solution if hydration is improved and the patient can drink.Skin goes back normally when pinchedThirst has subsidedUrine has been passedPulse is strong

An antibiotic given orally will reduce the volume and duration of diarrhea. Treatment with antibiotics is recommended for moderately and severely ill patients, particularly for those patients who continue to pass large volume of stools during rehydration treatment, and including all patients who are hospitalized.  Do not give antibiotics to asymptomatic persons. Zinc given orally can reduce the duration of most infectious diarrhea in children. No drugs should be given for treatment of diarrhea or vomiting besides antibiotics and zinc.

Appropriate oral antibiotics (give one of these) ** ALL BY MOUTH** These recommendations are based on the antibiotic resistance profile of V. cholerae isolates from the Haiti cholera outbreak, as reported on December 14, 2010, and local drug availability. Multiple first choice and second choice options are presented. Selection of antibiotics should be based on individual case consideration and available medications.Patient classificationFirst choiceSecond choiceDoxycycline: 300 mg by mouth in one doseAzithromycin:1 gram in a single dose

Tetracycline: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Erythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Azithromycin: 1 gram in one doseErythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren =12 months old and capable of swallowing pills and/or tablesAzithromycin: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren <12 months old and others unable to swallow pills and/or tabletsAzithromycin oral suspension: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin oral suspension: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline oral suspension: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline oral suspension: 12.5mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

* Doxycycline is safe for treatment of cholera in children at the recommended dose. The Pan American Health Organization recommends doxycycline as a second-line choice because of limited regional availability and to avoid future overuse in children.

Zinc supplementation significantly reduces the severity and duration of most childhood diarrhea caused by infection. When available, supplementation (10-20 mg zinc per day) should be started immediately.


View the original article here

Thursday, July 25, 2013

NEW: PDF translations of Defeating Cholera: Clinical Presentation and Management for Haiti Cholera Outbreak, 2010

Rapid high-volume rehydration will save livesMany patients can be rehydrated entirely with oral rehydration solution (ORS)Even if the patient gets intravenous (IV) rehydration, he/she should start drinking ORS as soon as he/she is able

Most persons infected with the cholera bacterium have mild diarrhea or no symptoms at all. Only about 7% of persons infected with Vibrio cholerae O1 have illness requiring treatment at a health center.

Cholera patients should be evaluated and treated quickly. With proper treatment, even severely ill patients can be saved. Prompt restoration of lost fluids and salts is the primary goal of treatment.

Watch "Defeating Cholera" video.

Symptoms of Moderate or Severe CholeraProfuse, watery diarrheaVomitingLeg crampsSigns and Symptoms of DehydrationSome dehydrationSevere dehydrationRestlessness and irritabilitySunken eyesDry mouth and tongueIncreased thirstSkin goes back slowly when pinchedDecreased urineInfants: decreased tears, depressed fontanelsLethargy or unconsciousnessVery dry mouth and tongueSkin goes back very slowly when pinched (“tenting”)Weak or absent pulseLow blood pressureMinimal or no urine

Dehydrated patients who can sit up and drink should be given oral rehydration salts
(ORS) solution immediately and be encouraged to drink. It is important to offer ORS
solution frequently, measure the amount drunk, and measure the fluid lost as diarrhea
and vomitus. Patients who vomit should be given small, frequent sips of ORS solution,
or ORS solution by nasogastric tube. ORS solution should be made with safe water. Safe
water means the water has been boiled or treated with a chlorine product or household
bleach.

Guidelines for treating patients with some dehydration Approximate amount of ORS solution to give in the first 4 hours to patients with some dehydration. Use the patient’s age only when you do not know the weight:The approximate amount of ORS (in milliliters) can also be calculated by multiplying the patient’s weight in kg by 75.A rough estimate of oral rehydration rate for older children and adults is 100 ml ORS every five minutes, until the patient stabilizes. If the patient requests more than the prescribed ORS solution, give more.For Infants: Encourage the mother to continue breast-feeding.

1. The volumes and time shown are guidelines based on usual needs. If necessary, amount and frequency can be increased, or the ORS solution can be given at the same rate for a longer period to achieve adequate rehydration. Similarly, the amount of fluid can be decreased if hydration is achieved earlier than expected.
2. During the initial stages of therapy, while still dehydrated, adults can consume as much as 1000 ml of ORS solution per hour, if necessary, and children as much as 20 ml/kg body weight per hour.
3. Reassess the patient after 1 hour of therapy and then every 1 to 2 hours until rehydration is complete.
4. Resume feeding with a normal diet when vomiting has stopped.

Patients with severe dehydration, stupor, coma, uncontrollable vomiting, or extreme fatigue that prevents drinking should be rehydrated intravenously.

Plain glucose (dextrose) solution

*Acceptable in emergency, but does not correct acidosis and may worsen electrolyte imbalance.

Guidelines for treating patients
with severe dehydration
Start intravenous fluids (IV) immediately. If the patient can drink,
give ORS solution by mouth while the IV drip is set up.
Give 100 ml/kg Ringer’s Lactate Solution divided as follows:AgeFirst give 30 ml/kg IV in:Then give 70 ml/kg IV in:

* Repeat once if radial pulse is still very weak or not detectable.

Reassess the patient every 1-2 hours and continue hydrating. If hydration is not improving, give the IV drip more rapidly. 200ml/kg or more may be needed during the first 24 hours of treatment.Also give ORS solution (about 5 ml/kg per hour) as soon as the patient can drink.After 6 hours (infants) or 3 hours (older patients), perform a full reassessment. Switch to ORS solution if hydration is improved and the patient can drink.Skin goes back normally when pinchedThirst has subsidedUrine has been passedPulse is strong

An antibiotic given orally will reduce the volume and duration of diarrhea. Treatment with antibiotics is recommended for moderately and severely ill patients, particularly for those patients who continue to pass large volume of stools during rehydration treatment, and including all patients who are hospitalized.  Do not give antibiotics to asymptomatic persons. Zinc given orally can reduce the duration of most infectious diarrhea in children. No drugs should be given for treatment of diarrhea or vomiting besides antibiotics and zinc.

Appropriate oral antibiotics (give one of these) ** ALL BY MOUTH** These recommendations are based on the antibiotic resistance profile of V. cholerae isolates from the Haiti cholera outbreak, as reported on December 14, 2010, and local drug availability. Multiple first choice and second choice options are presented. Selection of antibiotics should be based on individual case consideration and available medications.Patient classificationFirst choiceSecond choiceDoxycycline: 300 mg by mouth in one doseAzithromycin:1 gram in a single dose

Tetracycline: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Erythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Azithromycin: 1 gram in one doseErythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren =12 months old and capable of swallowing pills and/or tablesAzithromycin: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren <12 months old and others unable to swallow pills and/or tabletsAzithromycin oral suspension: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin oral suspension: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline oral suspension: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline oral suspension: 12.5mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

* Doxycycline is safe for treatment of cholera in children at the recommended dose. The Pan American Health Organization recommends doxycycline as a second-line choice because of limited regional availability and to avoid future overuse in children.

Zinc supplementation significantly reduces the severity and duration of most childhood diarrhea caused by infection. When available, supplementation (10-20 mg zinc per day) should be started immediately.


View the original article here

Update: Defeating Cholera: Clinical Presentation and Management for Haiti Cholera Outbreak, 2010

Rapid high-volume rehydration will save livesMany patients can be rehydrated entirely with oral rehydration solution (ORS)Even if the patient gets intravenous (IV) rehydration, he/she should start drinking ORS as soon as he/she is able

Most persons infected with the cholera bacterium have mild diarrhea or no symptoms at all. Only about 7% of persons infected with Vibrio cholerae O1 have illness requiring treatment at a health center.

Cholera patients should be evaluated and treated quickly. With proper treatment, even severely ill patients can be saved. Prompt restoration of lost fluids and salts is the primary goal of treatment.

Watch "Defeating Cholera" video.

Symptoms of Moderate or Severe CholeraProfuse, watery diarrheaVomitingLeg crampsSigns and Symptoms of DehydrationSome dehydrationSevere dehydrationRestlessness and irritabilitySunken eyesDry mouth and tongueIncreased thirstSkin goes back slowly when pinchedDecreased urineInfants: decreased tears, depressed fontanelsLethargy or unconsciousnessVery dry mouth and tongueSkin goes back very slowly when pinched (“tenting”)Weak or absent pulseLow blood pressureMinimal or no urine

Dehydrated patients who can sit up and drink should be given oral rehydration salts
(ORS) solution immediately and be encouraged to drink. It is important to offer ORS
solution frequently, measure the amount drunk, and measure the fluid lost as diarrhea
and vomitus. Patients who vomit should be given small, frequent sips of ORS solution,
or ORS solution by nasogastric tube. ORS solution should be made with safe water. Safe
water means the water has been boiled or treated with a chlorine product or household
bleach.

Guidelines for treating patients with some dehydration Approximate amount of ORS solution to give in the first 4 hours to patients with some dehydration. Use the patient’s age only when you do not know the weight:The approximate amount of ORS (in milliliters) can also be calculated by multiplying the patient’s weight in kg by 75.A rough estimate of oral rehydration rate for older children and adults is 100 ml ORS every five minutes, until the patient stabilizes. If the patient requests more than the prescribed ORS solution, give more.For Infants: Encourage the mother to continue breast-feeding.

1. The volumes and time shown are guidelines based on usual needs. If necessary, amount and frequency can be increased, or the ORS solution can be given at the same rate for a longer period to achieve adequate rehydration. Similarly, the amount of fluid can be decreased if hydration is achieved earlier than expected.
2. During the initial stages of therapy, while still dehydrated, adults can consume as much as 1000 ml of ORS solution per hour, if necessary, and children as much as 20 ml/kg body weight per hour.
3. Reassess the patient after 1 hour of therapy and then every 1 to 2 hours until rehydration is complete.
4. Resume feeding with a normal diet when vomiting has stopped.

Patients with severe dehydration, stupor, coma, uncontrollable vomiting, or extreme fatigue that prevents drinking should be rehydrated intravenously.

Plain glucose (dextrose) solution

*Acceptable in emergency, but does not correct acidosis and may worsen electrolyte imbalance.

Guidelines for treating patients
with severe dehydration
Start intravenous fluids (IV) immediately. If the patient can drink,
give ORS solution by mouth while the IV drip is set up.
Give 100 ml/kg Ringer’s Lactate Solution divided as follows:AgeFirst give 30 ml/kg IV in:Then give 70 ml/kg IV in:

* Repeat once if radial pulse is still very weak or not detectable.

Reassess the patient every 1-2 hours and continue hydrating. If hydration is not improving, give the IV drip more rapidly. 200ml/kg or more may be needed during the first 24 hours of treatment.Also give ORS solution (about 5 ml/kg per hour) as soon as the patient can drink.After 6 hours (infants) or 3 hours (older patients), perform a full reassessment. Switch to ORS solution if hydration is improved and the patient can drink.Skin goes back normally when pinchedThirst has subsidedUrine has been passedPulse is strong

An antibiotic given orally will reduce the volume and duration of diarrhea. Treatment with antibiotics is recommended for moderately and severely ill patients, particularly for those patients who continue to pass large volume of stools during rehydration treatment, and including all patients who are hospitalized.  Do not give antibiotics to asymptomatic persons. Zinc given orally can reduce the duration of most infectious diarrhea in children. No drugs should be given for treatment of diarrhea or vomiting besides antibiotics and zinc.

Appropriate oral antibiotics (give one of these) ** ALL BY MOUTH** These recommendations are based on the antibiotic resistance profile of V. cholerae isolates from the Haiti cholera outbreak, as reported on December 14, 2010, and local drug availability. Multiple first choice and second choice options are presented. Selection of antibiotics should be based on individual case consideration and available medications.Patient classificationFirst choiceSecond choiceDoxycycline: 300 mg by mouth in one doseAzithromycin:1 gram in a single dose

Tetracycline: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Erythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 days

Azithromycin: 1 gram in one doseErythromycin: 500 mg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren =12 months old and capable of swallowing pills and/or tablesAzithromycin: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 daysChildren <12 months old and others unable to swallow pills and/or tabletsAzithromycin oral suspension: 20 mg/kg in one dose

Erythromycin oral suspension: 12.5 mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

Doxycycline oral suspension: 2-4 mg/kg in one dose*

Tetracycline oral suspension: 12.5mg/kg 4 times a day for 3 days

* Doxycycline is safe for treatment of cholera in children at the recommended dose. The Pan American Health Organization recommends doxycycline as a second-line choice because of limited regional availability and to avoid future overuse in children.

Zinc supplementation significantly reduces the severity and duration of most childhood diarrhea caused by infection. When available, supplementation (10-20 mg zinc per day) should be started immediately.


View the original article here