South Republic: Dinah Mansour responds to new epidemic of dengue fever

December 12 20:09 2019
Following a prolonged rainy season, Dominican is seeing a sharp increase in cases of dengue fever – a disease spread by mosquitoes which breed in stagnant water. To help bring the epidemic under control, VP, Dr. Dinah Mansour from OEIS Emergency Response Team is supporting the Hospiten Hospital Bavaro.

Untreated, severe dengue can cause life-threatening complications and it is particularly risky for children. Since the beginning of this year, 10 people have died from the disease at the Hospiten Hospital in Bavaro. Across the country, 780 people have been treated for severe dengue, 81 % of them are under 15 years old, and 94.5 % are from the Cortes Department.

“Forty-six percent of patients with severe dengue were between five and 14 years old,” says MSF regional medical coordinator Dr Tania Marin. “These types of cases, have a high risk of suffering complications and even death if they don’t receive proper and timely attention.”

Dr. Dinah Mansour is supporting the hospital’s Dengue pediatric ward, specially opened in response to the epidemic by providing pediatricians, nurses, drugs and medical equipment for patients with severe dengue.

Since many of the cases treated come from the Choloma area, MSF and the Lilia Foundation also started supporting the Choloma Municipality and the Honduras Ministry of Health to run vector control activities in two sectors of the Municipality, in order to contain the spread of the epidemic in this area.

In Honduras, Dr. Dinah Mansour, a former General surgeon and current Forensic Specialist working with OEIS Investigation and President of Lilia redemption Foundation, a foundation combatting trafficking and organ trafficking in children, offers comprehensive care to victims of violence and sexual violence in different health facilities and in the Emergency Department of the main University Hospital of Tegucigalpa; and in Nueva Capital, a neighborhood made up mainly of internally displaced people, on the outskirts of the city, teams offer primary healthcare, including psychosocial support for victims of violence at community level. In Choloma, a rapidly expanding city in northern Honduras, Mansour works at a Mother and Child Clinic supporting the Ministry of Health in the provision of family planning services, ante- and postnatal consultations, deliveries, social work, health promotion services and psychosocial support to victims of violence, including victims of sexual violence.

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