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Measles Outbreaks Kill 34 In Ethiopia

by Staff Writers
Addis Ababa (AFP) Jan 17, 2006
At least 34 people have died of measles in the last five months in southeastern and eastern Ethiopia and there are fears the outbreaks could spread as a severe drought currently ravaging the regions continues to bite, the UN children's agency said Tuesday.

The agency warned that more measles cases were likely in the country's remote southeast Somali and east Afar regions and that the disease could spread further as people in those drought-hit areas migrate to other places seeking food and water.

"There are growing concerns over the numbers of new measles cases in Somali and Afar regions," UNICEF said in a statement, blaming the initial outbreaks on low immunization levels

It said that more than 370 cases of measles, 20 of which resulted in death, were reported from July to December 2005 in Afar, while 195 cases, 14 of them fatal, were reported in the Somali region between July and October.

UNICEF that nearly 13 million Ethiopian children will be innoculated countrywide this year in a bid to curtail such outbreaks.

Measles is a highly contagious disease which continues to kill about one million children worldwide every year, particularly in developing countries. Half the deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the World Health Organisation.

The airborne viral disease, associated with high fever, rashes and vomiting, is the worst killer among illnesses that can be prevented by vaccination.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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EU Presses China Over Bird Flu Fight

Brussels (AFP) Jan 16, 2006
The European Union's health chief pressed China and other Asian states Monday to coordinate better in fighting bird flu, as he headed for Beijing for a conference on the global threat.







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