Write an article for publication in a health magazine stating the causes and effects, and suggesting what should be done in order to check it.
Cholera: A Preventable Killer in Our Midst
By a Concerned Correspondent
In the past few weeks, the outbreak of a deadly epidemic in our community has claimed several lives and thrown families into mourning. The disease, cholera, spreads with alarming speed, and unless we understand its causes and effects, and act decisively, more lives will be lost needlessly.
Causes
Cholera is caused chiefly by drinking water and eating food contaminated with harmful bacteria. In our area, several factors have fuelled the outbreak. Many households have no access to clean, treated water and are forced to drink from streams and shallow wells that are polluted by refuse. Open defecation and poorly sited pit latrines allow waste to seep into these water sources. Heaps of uncollected rubbish attract flies, which carry germs from filth to food. Poor personal hygiene, such as failing to wash the hands with soap after using the toilet and before eating, completes the deadly chain of infection.
Effects
The effects of the epidemic have been devastating. Victims suffer severe vomiting and watery diarrhoea, which drain the body of fluids and lead to rapid dehydration and, in many cases, death within hours. Our clinics are overwhelmed, and families spend their meagre savings on treatment. Schools and markets have emptied as people stay away in fear. Beyond the human toll, the economy of the community has been paralysed, and the reputation of the area as a healthy place to live has been damaged.
What Should Be Done
The situation is not hopeless. The government and local authorities must provide clean, treated water and construct proper public toilets. Refuse must be collected and disposed of regularly. Health workers should embark on vigorous public enlightenment, teaching people to boil or treat drinking water, to wash their hands with soap, and to seek medical help at the first sign of illness. Oral rehydration therapy should be made freely available. Above all, every household must keep its surroundings clean.
An epidemic of this kind is entirely preventable. If we combine government action with personal responsibility, we can bring the outbreak under control and prevent its recurrence.