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Dominican Republic tightens border after first cholera case

First Haiti cholera case found in Florida
Washington (AFP) Nov 17, 2010 - A woman who recently visited relatives in Haiti has become the first person known to bring cholera into Florida from the Caribbean nation, the state's health department said Wednesday. "We have laboratory confirmation in fact that she has the strain that is affecting Haiti," Florida Department of Health spokesman Rob Hayes told AFP by phone. "She has been treated and is going well," Hayes added. The woman has not been identified, but resides in Collier county on Florida's southwest coast. Hayes declined to say whether she remains hospitalized.

The state has also een in contact with its county governments to brief them on how to respond if suspected cases are being investigated, Hayes said. Local Florida media have reported that the woman's family live in the Artibonite Valley, the source of Haiti's cholera outbreak which has now claimed some 1,100 lives and sickened over 18,300 people. Florida officials have already been urged to test people quickly if they show signs of cholera as the state has a large number of about 240,000 Haitian-born residents and many of them travel back and forth to Haiti.
by Staff Writers
Santo Domingo (AFP) Nov 17, 2010
The Dominican Republic struggled Wednesday to slow the advance of a raging cholera epidemic from neighboring Haiti Wednesday, after discovering the first case of the highly contagious disease within its borders.

President Leonel Fernandez held an emergency strategy meeting with his cabinet to brainstorm on ways to combat the disease, one day after the health officials announced that a 32-year old Haitian-born man was the country's first cholera case.

"The decision was made to tighten health controls along the border," health minister Bautista Rojas Gomez hold reporters during a break in the cabinet meeting.

"With respect to water, there will be stricter oversight, including chlorination throughout the country," he said.

The measures by the Dominican government are meant to prevent a cholera outbreak like the one spreading rapidly in its next-door neighbor.

Officials in the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, also have conducted home searches to find cases of the highly contagious ailment.

Meanwhile increased border checks have led to the detention of 170 people suspected of trying to get across the border without proper documentation and who may be infected, authorities said on Tuesday.

Dominican health officials said its one confirmed cholera patient, who is being treated in the hospital, had returned from Port-au-Prince shortly before falling ill.

Dominican officials worry that the fear of the scourge could have a devastating impact on its tourist industry, the country's main income generator.

"This really is a serious danger," Santos Ramirez of the Dominican Medical Board warned. "Cholera could become a pandemic if it spreads on this side of the island. We must avoid a disaster of that scope."

Authorities fear the cholera epidemic could spread like wildfire if it takes hold in the squalid refugee camps around Haiti's capital, where hundreds of thousands of earthquake refugees live in cramped and unsanitary conditions, and could jump the border into the Dominican Republic.

Haitian health officials said Wednesday that some 1,100 people have died since the disease was first detected in late October and more than 18,000 have been hospitalized.

The cholera outbreak -- the first in half a century in the impoverished Caribbean nation -- is bringing new chaos to Haiti ravaged in a January quake, which killed 250,000 people and left 1.3 million homeless.



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EPIDEMICS
First Haiti cholera case found in Florida
Washington (AFP) Nov 17, 2010
A woman who recently visited relatives in Haiti has become the first person known to bring cholera into Florida from the Caribbean nation, the state's health department said Wednesday. "We have laboratory confirmation in fact that she has the strain that is affecting Haiti," Florida Department of Health spokesman Rob Hayes told AFP by phone. "She has been treated and is going well," Hayes ad ... read more







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