Sunday, May 30, 2010

Food-Borne Illness, Cholera Remain Concerns

A cholera victim, a 60-year-old hill tribesman is comforted by his wife while receiving treatment at Ratanakiri Provincial Hospital in Banlung, located in northeast Cambodia. (Photo: AP)

Nuch Sarita, VOA Khmer
Washington, D.C Friday, 28 May 2010

“Specific symptoms of cholera include sudden and large amounts of watery diarrhea and vomiting.”
Cambodia continues to experience a prolonged hot season, and health experts remain concerned about severe illness or fatalities resulting from diarrhea.

“Your body can lose a lot of fluids and salts when you have very loose, watery stool,” Taing Tek Hong, a Florida-based physician, told “Hello VOA” on Thursday. “And it is important to replenish them. You need to drink plenty of fluids.”

He said dehydrated people may need to drink oral rehydration solutions that contain carbohydrates and electrolytes. You can use regular soda or soft drinks to replace water, he said.

Taing Tek Hong also said the rotavirus disease is the most common cause of severe diarrhea in children worldwide and is responsible for the deaths of children in developing countries.

A lack of sanitation or access to clean water can encourage the infection in children before age five, he said.

“In young children, rotavirus disease is characterized by diarrhea, vomiting, fever, and severe dehydration,” he said. “Death is caused by dehydration, not by the virus itself. Rotavirus disease can be treated with zinc tablets. Vaccination offers the best [solution] for preventing severe rotavirus disease.”

Along with watery diarrhea, Cambodians are worried about cholera, with several outbreaks occurring this year.

“Specific symptoms of cholera include sudden and large amounts of watery diarrhea and vomiting,” Taing Tek Hong told a caller. “The stool has a characteristic ‘rice-water’ appearance—grey—and a mild fishy smell. Other symptoms can occur such as thirst, weakness, coma and death. Fever is not a symptom of cholera.”

A simple home remedy of water, salt, sugar and ground charcoal can help rehydrate people with severe diarrhea, he said, following the suggestion of another caller.

One teaspoon of salt and eight teaspoons of sugar can be added to one liter of clean water, along with ground charcoal, he said, which can absorb toxins.

Treatment can include antibiotics, IVs and the replenishment of liquids.

Causes come from germs that infect contaminated food and water, allowing infection of many people through a single source. Microbes can be found in undercooked meat or unwashed food.

Illness can be prevented through hand-washing prior to food preparation, before eating and after using the toilet. Trash should not be thrown in the river, he said.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

yes, a lot of food borne and water borne ailments can be prevented with simple and common sense by education. don't forget to make personal hygiene a habit, not a spur of the moment thing, you know! yes, a little hand washing and good food preparation can make a big difference. no excuses in the world can justify the lacking of, really! wake up people, unless you want to keep dying!

Anonymous said...

Boil water before you drink it..
Just that and you would be OK..