Haiti cholera spreading faster than predicted-UN

UNITED NATIONS, (Reuters) – Haiti’s deadly cholera  epidemic is spreading faster than originally estimated and is  likely to result in hundreds of thousands of cases and last up  to a year, a senior U.N. official said yesterday.

Since the disease first appeared in mid-October it has  killed 1,344 people as of Friday in the poverty-stricken and  earthquake-ravaged Caribbean nation.

But U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Haiti Nigel Fisher  said the real death toll might be “closer to two thousand than  one” because of lack of data from remote areas, and the number  of cases 60,000-70,000 instead of the official figure of around  50,000.

Addressing a U.N. news conference by video link from Haiti,  Fisher said experts from the World Health Organization were now  revising their estimate that the diarrheal disease, spread by  poor sanitation, would cause 200,000 cases within six months.

“They are now revising that to 200,000 in closer to a  three-month period. So this epidemic is moving faster,” he  said, adding that it was now present in all 10 of Haiti’s  provinces. “It’s going to spread.”

“The medical specialists all say that this cholera epidemic  will continue through months and maybe a year at least, that we  will see literally hundreds of thousands of cases,” Fisher  said.

It was “almost impossible to stop the spread of these cases  because it is so contagious, and those who carry the cholera  bacterium often take days to show it, and in that (time) they  may move anywhere,” he added.

Fisher said U.N. and other aid workers needed to  “significantly ratchet up” their response, including going  through faith groups to distribute chlorine tablets to purify  water, and increasing the number of treatment centers.

But he said opening new treatment centers was running into  resistance from local authorities because of people’s fears of  having them in their neighborhoods.

The anti-cholera campaign has been complicated by  unconfirmed reports that U.N. peacekeepers from Nepal brought  the disease to Haiti, where it had been absent for 100 years.