BURKINA FASO: Meningitis epidemics in vaccinated areas
Source: IRIN
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OUAGADOUGOU, 10 April 2008 (IRIN) - People vaccinated against meningitis are supposed to have protection for three years but health officials have announced that meningitis epidemics have
occurred in several areas where populations had recently been immunized. "[Health researchers] are currently collecting information so as to identify the factors explaining the recurrence of the
epidemic in districts where populations have been vaccinated", Ousmane Badolo, head of the epidemiologic surveillance department at the ministry of health, told IRIN. Vaccination campaigns target
people between 2 to 30 years old; according to the ministry of health, 80 to 90 percent of the victims of meningitis belong to that age group. A total of 714 people have died since 1 January out of
7,184 cases. Several different bacteria can cause meningitis which is an inflammation of the protective membranes covering the central nervous system. The Neisseria sero-group is one of the most
important to watch because it often leads to epidemics, experts say. Badolo, the epidemiologist, said that health research teams from the World Health Organization and US-based Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention have come to Burkina Faso to investigate. "This is the first time that such research is being conducted," Badolo said, adding that at this stage he could only guess why the
vaccination programmes have not worked. "Perhaps it is because of population displacement," he said, "for instance in gold mining areas people are often coming and going." The health researchers
will focus their work on the districts of Réo in the central west of the country, Boulsa in the central north, Titao in the north and in Sig-nonghin a district in the north of the capital
Ouagadougou. The populations in each of those four districts were vaccinated last year yet each has reached epidemic thresholds. A total of five out of the country's 55 districts have reached the
epidemic threshold and 14 others are on alert. Meanwhile, 3.5 million people have been vaccinated this year out of a population of 14 million. The government said it is in the process of procuring a
million more vaccines with the help of UN Children's Agency UNICEF. bo/dh © IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org



