Friday, January 16, 2026
  • Who’sWho Africa AWARDS
  • About TimeAfrica Magazine
  • Contact Us
Time Africa Magazine
  • Home
  • Magazine
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • World News
    • US
    • UAE
    • Europe
    • UK
    • Israel-Hamas
    • Russia-Ukraine
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Column
  • Interviews
  • Special Report
No Result
View All Result
Time Africa Magazine
  • Home
  • Magazine
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • World News
    • US
    • UAE
    • Europe
    • UK
    • Israel-Hamas
    • Russia-Ukraine
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Column
  • Interviews
  • Special Report
No Result
View All Result
Time Africa Magazine
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • Magazine
  • World News

Home » Health » Why Africa’s deadly cholera crisis is worse than ever

Why Africa’s deadly cholera crisis is worse than ever

Nearly 350,000 cases have been reported in the past four years, with 6,000 lives lost | By SEBABATSO MOSAMO, FARAI MUTSAKA, GERALD IMRAY

April 14, 2025
in Health
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Extreme weather events, including tropical storms, floods, and drought, have ravaged parts of Africa over the past three years, leading to widespread hunger and displacement.

These events have also left a deadly consequence: a surge in cholera outbreaks.

Since late 2021, over 6,000 lives have been lost, and nearly 350,000 cases reported across southern and East Africa.

Malawi and Zambia are experiencing their worst outbreaks on record, while Zimbabwe has endured multiple waves. Mozambique, Kenya, Ethiopia, and Somalia have also been significantly impacted. These nations have all faced floods, droughts, or in some instances, both.

ReadAlso

How climate crisis is creating hellish conditions for waste pickers at Nairobi dump declared ‘full’ 24 years ago

Kenya Is Betting Its Economy on Women Willing to Risk It All

Health authorities, scientists, and aid agencies now recognise this unprecedented rise in cholera as another example of how extreme weather fuels disease outbreaks.

Tulio de Oliveira, a South Africa-based scientist specialising in diseases in developing nations, said: “The outbreaks are getting much larger because the extreme climate events are getting much more common.”

ADVERTISEMENT
A family uses a boat to navigate floodwaters in Githurai, Kenya
A family uses a boat to navigate floodwaters in Githurai, Kenya (AP)

Mr De Oliveira, who led the team that identified new coronavirus variants during the Covid-19 pandemic, said that southern Africa’s recent outbreaks can be linked to the cyclones and floods that struck Malawi in late 2021 and early 2022. These events spread cholera bacteria to new areas, exacerbating the crisis.

Zimbabwe and Zambia have seen cases rise as they wrestle with severe droughts and people rely on less safe sources of water in their desperation like boreholes, shallow wells and rivers, which can all be contaminated. Days after the deadly flooding in Kenya and other parts of East Africa this month, cholera cases appeared.

The World Health Organization calls cholera a disease of poverty, as it thrives where there is poor sanitation and a lack of clean water. Africa has had eight times as many deaths this year as the Middle East, the second-most affected region.

Historically vulnerable, Africa is even more at risk as it faces the worst impacts of climate change as well as the effect of the El Niño weather phenomenon, health experts say.

In what’s become a perfect storm, there’s also a global shortage of cholera vaccines, which are needed only in poorer countries.

Street vendors in Lusaka, Zambia sell phone cards underneath a billboard urging people to protect themselves from cholera
Street vendors in Lusaka, Zambia sell phone cards underneath a billboard urging people to protect themselves from cholera (AP)

“It doesn’t affect countries with resources,” said Dr Daniela Garone, the international medical coordinator for Doctors Without Borders, also known by its French acronym MSF. “So, it doesn’t bring the resources.”Billions of dollars have been invested into other diseases that predominantly affect the world’s most vulnerable, like polio and tuberculosis, largely because those diseases are highly contagious and could cause outbreaks even in rich countries. But that’s not the case with cholera, where epidemics remain contained.

WHO said this month there is a “critical shortage” of oral cholera vaccines in the global stockpile. Since the start of 2023, 15 countries — the desperate few — have requested a total of 82 million doses to deal with deadly outbreaks while only 46 million doses were available.

There are just 3.2 million doses left, below the target of having at least 5 million in reserve. While there are currently cholera epidemics in the Middle East, the Americas and Southeast Asia, Africa is by far the worst-affected region.

Vaccines alliance GAVI and UNICEF said last month that the approval of a new cholera vaccine would boost stocks. But the result of the shortage has already been measured in deaths.

Mildred Banda displays a photo of her one-year-old son, Ndanji
Mildred Banda displays a photo of her one-year-old son, Ndanji (AP)

Lilanda, a township on the edge of the Zambian capital of Lusaka, is a typical cholera hot spot. Stagnant pools of water dot the dirt roads. Clean water is like gold dust. Here, over two awful days in January, Mildred Banda saw her one-year-old son die from cholera and rushed to save the life of her teenage daughter.

Cholera shouldn’t be killing anyone. The disease is easily treated and easily prevented — and the vaccines are relatively simple to produce.

That didn’t help Ms Banda’s son, Ndanji.

When he fell sick with diarrhoea, he was treated with an oral rehydration solution at a clinic and released. He slipped back into dehydration that night at home. Ms Banda feels terrible guilt.

“I should have noticed earlier that my son was not feeling well,” she said, sitting in her tiny concrete house. “I should have acted faster and taken him back to the clinic. I should have taken him back to save his life.”

Because of the vaccine shortage, Zambia couldn’t undertake a preventative vaccination campaign after neighboring Malawi’s outbreak. That should have been a warning call, said Dr de Oliveira. Zambia only made an emergency request when its cases started mounting.

The doses that might have saved Ndanji started arriving in mid-January. He died on January 6.

Hospital beds stand empty in a ward dedicated to cholera patients in Zambia’s Lusaka
Hospital beds stand empty in a ward dedicated to cholera patients in Zambia’s Lusaka (AP)

In Zimbabwe, a drought worsened by El Niño has seen cholera take hold in distant rural areas as well as its traditional hot spots of crowded urban neighborhoods.

Abi Kebra Belaye, MSF representative for Zimbabwe, said the southern African nation normally has around 17 hard-hit areas, mostly urban. This year, cholera spread to 62 districts as the struggle to find water heightened the risk.

“This part of Africa is paying the highest price of climate change,” Ms Kebra Belaye said.

Augustine Chonyera, who hails from a cholera-prone part of the capital, Harare, was shocked when he recently visited the sparsely populated rural district of Buhera.

He said he heard grim tales of the impact of the disease: a family losing five members, a husband and wife dying within hours of each other and local businesses using delivery trucks to take the sick to a clinic several kilometers (miles) away.

“It seems now the people in rural areas are in more danger than us. I still wonder how it happened,” Mr Chonyera said.

He said he returned home as soon as he could — after giving a large bottle of treated water he had brought with him to an elderly woman.

Source: The Independent
Tags: choleraDoctors without BordersKenyaWorld Health OrganizationZambia
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Uchenna Okafor Congratulates Governor Sheriff Oborevwori on Award of Governor of the Year by Vanguard Newspaper

Next Post

151 dead as Nigeria struggles with rapidly spreading meningitis

You MayAlso Like

Professor Hadi Larijani (left) and Peter Akor with a prototype of the AI Epilepsy Headset. Picture: PA
Health

AI-powered headset can predict epilepsy seizures before they occur

January 3, 2026
Health

Why Your Sleeping Position May Be Shortening Your Life

December 31, 2025
Asthma medication is often taken via an inhaler. Image Credit: New Africa / Shutterstock.com
Health

New Asthma Injection Unveiled, Could Prevent Attacks With Just Two Jabs a Year

December 31, 2025
Health

British company breeding genetically engineered mosquitoes in Africa

December 30, 2025
Health

Cannabis reclassification could ‘open the floodgates’ for research, scientists say

December 26, 2025
Health

Nigeria Bans Indomie Vegetable Noodles Over Undeclared Allergens

December 20, 2025
Next Post

151 dead as Nigeria struggles with rapidly spreading meningitis

A cholera patient being administered ora rehydration under a tree in Akobo County (Photo: CARE South Sudan)

Death of five children during gruelling hospital trek blamed on Trump’s ‘America First’ aid cuts

Discussion about this post

Can sex really stretch out your vagina? Gynecologists set the record straight

AFCON 2025: Morocco Under the Floodlights

Africa 2025–2026: A Continent of Contrasts, Challenges and Hope

What Became of Gaddafi’s Surviving Children

Cuba Faces Growing Pressure from the United States After Maduro Capture

Nigeria 2–0 Algeria: Tactical Mastery and Decisive Execution

  • The vaginal wall can also stretch if you have sex with men with different-sized penises partners – but this is not permanent say experts (stock image)

    Can sex really stretch out your vagina? Gynecologists set the record straight

    610 shares
    Share 244 Tweet 153
  • AFCON 2025: Morocco Under the Floodlights

    544 shares
    Share 218 Tweet 136
  • Africa 2025–2026: A Continent of Contrasts, Challenges and Hope

    549 shares
    Share 220 Tweet 137
  • What Became of Gaddafi’s Surviving Children

    584 shares
    Share 234 Tweet 146
  • Cuba Faces Growing Pressure from the United States After Maduro Capture

    541 shares
    Share 216 Tweet 135
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The vaginal wall can also stretch if you have sex with men with different-sized penises partners – but this is not permanent say experts (stock image)

Can sex really stretch out your vagina? Gynecologists set the record straight

October 29, 2024

AFCON 2025: Morocco Under the Floodlights

December 21, 2025

Africa 2025–2026: A Continent of Contrasts, Challenges and Hope

January 1, 2026
The body of the dead former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi lies on a mattress inside a storage freezer in Misrata. Photograph: Mohamed Messara/EPA

What Became of Gaddafi’s Surviving Children

April 15, 2025

Trump Travel Ban Causes Uncertainty for Senegal and Ivory Coast World Cup Fans

January 14, 2026

Uganda Cuts Internet Ahead of Presidential Election

January 13, 2026

Uganda Gets Ready For General Election

January 13, 2026
Copyright AP Photo

Cuba Faces Growing Pressure from the United States After Maduro Capture

January 12, 2026

ABOUT US

Time Africa Magazine

TIMEAFRICA MAGAZINE is an African Magazine with a culture of excellence; a magazine without peer. Nearly a third of its readers hold advanced degrees and include novelists, … READ MORE >>

SECTIONS

  • Aviation
  • Column
  • Crime
  • Europe
  • Featured
  • Gallery
  • Health
  • Interviews
  • Israel-Hamas
  • Lifestyle
  • Magazine
  • Middle-East
  • News
  • Politics
  • Press Release
  • Russia-Ukraine
  • Science
  • Special Report
  • Sports
  • TV/Radio
  • UAE
  • UK
  • US
  • World News

Useful Links

  • AllAfrica
  • Channel Africa
  • El Khabar
  • The Guardian
  • Cairo Live
  • Le Republicain
  • Magazine: 9771144975608
  • Subscribe to TIMEAFRICA MAGAZINE biweekly news magazine

    Enjoy handpicked stories from around African continent,
    delivered anywhere in the world

    Subscribe

    • About TimeAfrica Magazine
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • WHO’SWHO AWARDS

    © Copyright TimeAfrica Magazine Limited 2026 - All rights reserved.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
    • Politics
    • Column
    • Interviews
    • Gallery
    • Lifestyle
    • Special Report
    • Sports
    • TV/Radio
    • Aviation
    • Health
    • Science
    • World News

    © Copyright TimeAfrica Magazine Limited 2026 - All rights reserved.

    This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.