This
years floods have killed more than 90 people, damaged thousands
of homes and 500,000 hectares of rice paddies (p8131)
As the flood waters slowly recede, they are giving way to outbreaks
of water-borne diseases which are affecting the most vulnerable
groups in Bangladesh (p8133)

The
Bangladesh Red Crescent has dispatched six medical teams to
the worst affected districts, each team is composed of a doctor,
a paramedic, Red Crescent youth and female volunteers and medical
supplies (p8134)
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Disease threatens thousands in flood
stricken Bangladesh
27 August 2002
by Razia Jobed in Bangladesh
Monsoon rains this year
have resulted in floods which have submerged upto half of Bangladesh.
The floods have killed more than 90 people, damaged thousands of homes
and 500,000 hectares of rice paddies.
As the flood waters receded in several districts in the north, centre
and south-east of the country, they gave way to outbreaks of waterborne
diseases which struck the most vulnerable groups in Bangladesh - those
already living below the poverty line, women and children particularly.
The Bangladesh Red Crescent has dispatched six medical teams to the
worst affected districts. Two of the teams have provided medical assistance
to more than 200 women and children on a daily basis in Sirajganj
and Gaibandha districts, situated 150 kms north-west of Dhaka. Each
medical team is composed of a doctor, a paramedic and Red Crescent
youth and female volunteers and medical supplies. The teams also carry
with them supplies of oral rehydration sachets and water purification
tablets in order to minimise waterborne illnesses.
The threat of such illnesses is real. Recent Ministry of Health figures
have more than 30,000 people in flooded areas being affected by waterborne
diseases. And in the capital, Dhaka, dengue fever which is caused
by mosquitos, has led to more than 2,000 people needing medical treatment
and has resulted in the deaths of more than 25 people.
Stagnant water, polluted sources of drinking water and people living
in unhygienic conditions in open fields or embankments have been the
main causes of illnesses such as dysentery, diarrhoea and dengue fever.
Hazera Begum, a 35-year-old mother with three sick children, turned
to the Bangladesh Red Crescent medical teams for help at a camp set
up at Biara village in Sirajganj district.
"I hope our turn will come soon and the doctors, who have come
to this village like angels will take care of my children" she
told Red Crescent volunteers as she stands in a queue.
Biara is a small village in a district where about 36,000 people were
infected by different flood-related diseases. The seven member Biara
medical camp is headed by an experienced doctor who will continue
to provide medical assistance to hundreds of patients daily for an
initial period of one month.
To support the Bangladesh Red Crescent in its work to minimise the
danger to the health of flood victims as well as provide emergency
relief items such as food and shelter, the International Federation
launched an appeal for 1.3 million USD earlier this month. In one
of the responses to the appeal, the World Health Organization (WHO)
in Bangladesh donated 4.2 million of water purification tablets to
the Federation appeal to be distributed among the population of the
worst affected flood regions.
Related Links:
Appeal - Monsoon Floods
Make an Online Donation
More on: South Asia Floods
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