Red Cross arms Centre Region against cholera outbreak

By Isaac Arkoh

Cape Coast, March, GNA – The Ghana Red Cross Society (GRCS) through the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies have presented various health emergency response relief items to the Central Regional Coordinating Council to tackle the cholera resurgence in the region.

The items included 540 cholera vaccines, 3000 tablets of chlorine, knapsack engine-powered spraying machines, personal protective equipment, Veronica buckets and hand washing stands.

The items are for onwards distribution to health facilities to contain the outbreak which began in October 2024, spread to more than 36 districts across five regions—Greater Accra, Central, Western, Eastern and Ashanti.

The region also benefited from a health volunteers training programme by the Ghana Red Cross Society with 80 out of the 250 trainees from the Region.

The volunteers are operating in the Greater Accra, Western, Ashanti and the Central Regions.

The Central Region recorded more than 3,000 suspected cholera cases with 260 confirmed, four health workers were infected in late 2024 and 19 people died from the disease.

Cholera is a highly fatal disease that spreads through contaminated food and water, leading to severe diarrhoea, dehydration, and, if left untreated, death.

In severe cases, a healthy individual can succumb within hours due to rapid fluid loss.

Although entirely preventable through access to clean water, proper sanitation, and good hygienic practices, cholera continues to pose a recurring public health challenge, particularly in areas with inadequate waste management and limited healthcare services.

The ongoing outbreak had placed immense strain on health facilities, stretching both medical staff and resources to their limits.

The Red Cross volunteers would operate in three districts in the region, including Mfantseman, Cape Coast and Komenda-Edina-Eguafo-Abrem.

Speaking in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Cape Coast, Mr Solomon Gbolo Gayori, Secretary General of the GRCS said the interventions were essential relief measures to enhance public health education drive and containment.

He said the GRCS had been at the forefront of the response, providing sanitation resources and engaging communities to curb the spread of the outbreak.

It had implemented multi-faceted interventions in the region through house-to-house campaigns by trained volunteers and promoting hand washing practices.

The volunteers had also made schools and community outreach, with media engagements leveraging radio/TV broadcasts for awareness creation, complemented by distribution of posters and leaflets at markets and public gatherings.

“Faith-based institutions (churches, mosques) and public facilities (markets, schools) serve as hubs for disseminating prevention messages, while community information centres facilitate real-time surveillance through volunteer networks,” he said.

Mr Bless Kwame Darkeh took delivery of the items and expressed gratitude to GRCS for the assistance and pledged to work with all stakeholders to stem the disease in the region.

GNA

AT/GRB