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People sit outside a cholera isolation center at a refugee camp in western Sudan, Tawila City, Darfur, August 14, 2025. /VCG
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported on Friday that cholera outbreaks, driven by conflict and poverty, are worsening across multiple countries and pose a significant global public health challenge.
The latest Disease Outbreak News said that 409,000 cholera cases and 4,738 deaths were reported across 31 countries between January 1 and August 17, 2025, with six countries reporting case fatality rates exceeding 1 percent.
According to the data, the Eastern Mediterranean Region registered the highest number of cases, while the African Region reported the most deaths.
The report warns that conflict, mass displacement, natural disasters and climate change are driving the spread of cholera, particularly in rural and flood-affected areas with weak infrastructure and limited healthcare access. These cross-border challenges have made outbreaks increasingly complex and difficult to contain.
WHO stresses that access to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene remains the only sustainable long-term solution to end the current cholera emergency and prevent future ones. Given the scale, severity and interconnected nature of the outbreaks, the risk of further spread both within and across countries is assessed as very high.
To curb transmission, WHO recommends strengthening surveillance, improving case management, scaling up Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) interventions, conducting vaccination campaigns, and enhancing cross-border coordination to implement public health measures.