Kala-azar patients from Qalaa an-Nahl transferred to Bazura Hospital for treatment on Nov 25, 2024

November 25, 2024 (GEDAREF) – An outbreak of Kala-azar in Sudan’s eastern Gedaref state is raising concerns amidst a fragile healthcare system and a large influx of people displaced by conflict. The disease, also known as visceral leishmaniasis, has infected 133 people in the Qalaa an-Nahl locality, resulting in six deaths, according to Abkar al-Douma Ibrahim, head of the Friends of Kala-azar and Communicable Diseases Association at al-Dahima Hospital. “The spread of the disease among children has disrupted schooling, with 40 children infected,” Ibrahim told Sudan Tribune. Seventy women and 17 men have also contracted the disease. The outbreak follows the recent sesame harvest, as the disease-carrying sandfly population thrives in the area’s abundant Balanites aegyptiaca “Heglig” trees and cracked earth. Sudan’s healthcare system is struggling to cope with the outbreak. Eighty per cent of health facilities in active conflict zones are not functioning, and 45% in other areas are also out of service. The region is battling concurrent outbreaks of cholera, dengue fever, and malaria, with severe shortages in medical supplies. Al-Dahima Hospital lacks essential medicines and diagnostic tools for Kala-azar, forcing patients to travel some 75 kilometres to Bazoura Hospital in the al-Rahad locality in Gedaref, often by …

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