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Meningitis epidemic claims nearly 130 lives in Niger

The AFP file photo shows a child being vaccinated in Niger amid a meningitis epidemic.

Niger’s health minister says the death toll from the meningitis epidemic that broke out in the West African country in January has reached nearly 130.

Mango Aghali said in a statement on Friday, “There are a total of 1,150 cases and unfortunately 129 deaths.”

Some 70 of the deaths occurred in capital, Niamey, which was reported to be the hardest hit by the disease.

“Three of the five districts” in Niamey are in “an epidemic state,” Aghali said, adding, “It is to be feared that the two others will also be the same.”

The previous death toll, announced on April 19, stood at 85 out of 908 cases across the country. The Nigerien Health Ministry has said the disease is spreading fast.

The World Health Organization (WHO) says Niger, which is among the world’s most impoverished countries, is often prone to such epidemics due to its position in the so-called “Meningitis Belt” in Africa, which stretches from Senegal in the west to Ethiopia in the east.

People are seen gathering at the health center of Lazaret, near Niger’s capital, Niamey, on April 23, 2015. © AFP

The belt also includes parts of Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Mali, Chad and Sudan. These countries are considered hyperendemic. The populations in these countries are at the highest risk of developing meningitis, and deadly outbreaks of the disease take victims every year.

Meningitis has different types. The deadly disease is often bacterial and sometimes viral, and occasionally due to fungal infections. The disease is spread through the air, causing an inflammation in the lining around the brain and spinal cord of its victims, killing them within hours.

The normal mortality rate of bacterial meningitis is 10 percent. However, if the disease is diagnosed and treated early enough, most patients recover. Meningitis’ symptoms can include fever, vomiting, exhaustion, severe muscle pain and headache.

MIS/MKA/SS


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