City
Epaper

Maintain hygiene, urges doctor amid rising cholera cases

By IANS | Updated: July 14, 2024 20:50 IST

New Delhi, July 15 Hygiene is crucial to curb the cholera outbreak, currently seen in Kerala and Gujarat, ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 15 Hygiene is crucial to curb the cholera outbreak, currently seen in Kerala and Gujarat, said a medical expert on Sunday.

Cholera is a waterborne bacterial infection due to the bacterium Vibrio cholerae that is transmitted from one infected person to another due to contaminated water or food, especially seafood.

"Once ingested, the bacteria multiply within the small intestine and produce the cholera toxins that are responsible for the symptoms of severe watery diarrhoea also called 'rice water loose stools' and severe dehydration,” Dr Sujatha Thyagarajan, Senior Consultant – Paediatrics & Paediatric Intensive care, Aster RV Hospital in Bengaluru, told IANS.

Kerala’s capital Thiruvananthapuram has seen a severe outbreak of cholera with reportedly one suspected death and 12 confirmed cases and 17 suspected cases are undergoing treatment. Several cases of cholera have also been reported from Gujarat and an area in a 2-kilometer radius has reportedly been declared as a cholera-affected area, under the Epidemic Diseases Act.

"The rapid loss of fluids and electrolytes, if not replaced quickly, can cause death. The spread can be rapid especially when there is limited clean water supply and unsanitary conditions reaching epidemic proportions very quickly," Dr Thyagarajan said.

She noted that cholera prevention is of utmost importance and requires a multi-pronged approach, adding that children and the elderly are highly vulnerable to severe dehydration, complications, and even death, and hence warrant prompt recognition and treatment.

"The focus must be on improving personal hygiene and ensuring access to clean potable water. It is important to ensure there are adequate sanitation practices to avoid contamination of sewage and safe water is provided at all times," she said.

She also recommended "proper cooking and safe handling of seafood".

"In general, adequate personal hygiene must be maintained at all times -- hand washing with soap after the toilet and before eating food."

Further, Dr Thyagarajan said once an outbreak is identified, the rapid spread must be contained aggressively through regular surveillance and prevention methods. "The main treatment of Cholera is timely rehydration through ORS (oral rehydration solution) or intravenous rehydration to replace the rapid fluid and electrolyte loss," she said, adding that antibiotics can help in severe cases.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologySC seeks Centre's 'comprehensive response' on pleas against Online Gaming Act, 2025

NationalSC seeks Centre's 'comprehensive response' on pleas against Online Gaming Act, 2025

BusinessAsian Travel Expo 2025 Welcomes Gulf Air Holidays as Co-Sponsor

EntertainmentFrom Lover to Killer: Vikrant Massey’s National Award-Worthy Range

CricketPAK vs SA 1st ODI LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch Pakistan vs South Africa Match in India

Health Realted Stories

Health8 in 10 Indians embrace return to office policy, flexibility, well-being major concern: Report

HealthJapan confirms season's third bird flu outbreak

HealthESTIC2025 marked by India’s big deep-tech leap: Jitendra Singh

HealthWaist-to-height ratio more accurate in predicting heart disease risk than BMI

HealthBJP MP Khandelwal urges PM Modi for policy on treatment of rare genetic disorder LAMA2-CMD