Dubai Telegraph - Deadly nose-bleed fever shocks Iraq as cases surge

EUR -
AED 4.256969
AFN 73.026624
ALL 95.949668
AMD 436.29849
ANG 2.074968
AOA 1062.937298
ARS 1612.956254
AUD 1.648622
AWG 2.089361
AZN 1.97515
BAM 1.955793
BBD 2.330592
BDT 141.989509
BGN 1.981339
BHD 0.437098
BIF 3425.188147
BMD 1.159146
BND 1.479895
BOB 7.995972
BRL 6.159011
BSD 1.157196
BTN 108.180626
BWP 15.778945
BYN 3.510788
BYR 22719.261378
BZD 2.327292
CAD 1.591102
CDF 2637.057544
CHF 0.913917
CLF 0.027244
CLP 1075.745893
CNY 7.982348
CNH 8.005172
COP 4253.385281
CRC 540.49813
CUC 1.159146
CUP 30.717369
CVE 110.264618
CZK 24.515015
DJF 206.059287
DKK 7.48519
DOP 68.689762
DZD 153.294785
EGP 59.995792
ERN 17.38719
ETB 182.369469
FJD 2.566871
FKP 0.87126
GBP 0.86899
GEL 3.147128
GGP 0.87126
GHS 12.613956
GIP 0.87126
GMD 85.201694
GNF 10142.964899
GTQ 8.863969
GYD 242.099162
HKD 9.082199
HNL 30.628894
HRK 7.547552
HTG 151.809475
HUF 393.739159
IDR 19654.711213
ILS 3.60393
IMP 0.87126
INR 108.971952
IQD 1515.894754
IRR 1525001.44174
ISK 144.047519
JEP 0.87126
JMD 181.799371
JOD 0.82188
JPY 184.582853
KES 149.909481
KGS 101.364887
KHR 4623.983998
KMF 494.955743
KPW 1043.080849
KRW 1744.874492
KWD 0.35536
KYD 0.964297
KZT 556.328075
LAK 24848.914008
LBP 103633.441366
LKR 360.978751
LRD 211.759267
LSL 19.520632
LTL 3.422657
LVL 0.701156
LYD 7.407974
MAD 10.813063
MDL 20.15193
MGA 4824.983303
MKD 61.639787
MMK 2434.137979
MNT 4156.167228
MOP 9.340468
MRU 46.32084
MUR 53.912319
MVR 17.920835
MWK 2006.593056
MXN 20.746631
MYR 4.565921
MZN 74.073751
NAD 19.520632
NGN 1572.092184
NIO 42.579853
NOK 11.093021
NPR 173.089401
NZD 1.985179
OMR 0.445696
PAB 1.157196
PEN 4.000686
PGK 4.994983
PHP 69.723065
PKR 323.078682
PLN 4.282755
PYG 7557.973845
QAR 4.231485
RON 5.101986
RSD 117.449594
RUB 96.003268
RWF 1683.694173
SAR 4.352195
SBD 9.33305
SCR 15.877645
SDG 696.647132
SEK 10.831104
SGD 1.486609
SHP 0.86966
SLE 28.486057
SLL 24306.724357
SOS 661.297712
SRD 43.45349
STD 23991.981659
STN 24.499915
SVC 10.124965
SYP 128.128397
SZL 19.526932
THB 38.14522
TJS 11.114462
TMT 4.068602
TND 3.417588
TOP 2.790945
TRY 51.295112
TTD 7.850973
TWD 37.135217
TZS 3008.589588
UAH 50.693025
UGX 4373.984863
USD 1.159146
UYU 46.629839
UZS 14107.951178
VES 527.05282
VND 30499.449254
VUV 138.346896
WST 3.161587
XAF 655.95473
XAG 0.017031
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.13265
XCG 2.085493
XDR 0.815797
XOF 655.95473
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.576393
ZAR 19.85325
ZMK 10433.709028
ZMW 22.593922
ZWL 373.244535
  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

Deadly nose-bleed fever shocks Iraq as cases surge
Deadly nose-bleed fever shocks Iraq as cases surge / Photo: Asaad NIAZI - AFP

Deadly nose-bleed fever shocks Iraq as cases surge

Spraying a cow with pesticides, health workers target blood-sucking ticks at the heart of Iraq's worst detected outbreak of a fever that causes people to bleed to death.

Text size:

The sight of the health workers, dressed in full protective kit, is one that has become common in the Iraqi countryside, as the Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever spreads, jumping from animals to humans.

This year Iraq has recorded 19 deaths among 111 CCHF cases in humans, according to the Word Health Organization.

The virus has no vaccine and onset can be swift, causing severe bleeding both internally and externally and especially from the nose. It causes death in as many as two-fifths of cases, according to medics.

"The number of cases recorded is unprecedented," said Haidar Hantouche, a health official in Dhi Qar province.

A poor farming region in southern Iraq, the province accounts for nearly half of Iraq's cases.

In previous years, cases could be counted "on the fingers of one hand", he added.

Transmitted by ticks, hosts of the virus include both wild and farmed animals such as buffalo, cattle, goats and sheep, all of which are common in Dhi Qar.

- Tick bites -

In the village of Al-Bujari, a team disinfects animals in a stable next to a house where a woman was infected. Wearing masks, goggles and overalls, the workers spray a cow and her two calves with pesticides.

A worker displays ticks that have fallen from the cow and been gathered into a container.

"Animals become infected by the bite of infected ticks," according to the World Health Organization.

"The CCHF virus is transmitted to people either by tick bites or through contact with infected animal blood or tissues during and immediately after slaughter," it adds.

The surge of cases this year has shocked officials, since numbers far exceed recorded cases in the 43 years since the virus was first documented in Iraq in 1979.

In his province, only 16 cases resulting in seven deaths had been recorded in 2021, Hantouche said. But this year Dhi Qar has recorded 43 cases, including eight deaths.

The numbers are still tiny compared with the Covid-19 pandemic -- where Iraq has registered over 25,200 deaths and 2.3 million recorded cases, according to WHO figures -- but health workers are worried.

Endemic in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Balkans, CCHF's fatality rate is between 10 and 40 percent, the WHO says.

The WHO's representative in Iraq, Ahmed Zouiten, said there were several "hypotheses" for the country's outbreak.

They included the spread of ticks in the absence of livestock spraying campaigns during Covid in 2020 and 2021.

And "very cautiously, we attribute part of this outbreak to global warming, which has lengthened the period of multiplication of ticks," he said.

But "mortality seems to be declining", he added, as Iraq had mounted a spraying campaign while new hospital treatments had shown "good results".

- Slaughterhouses under scrutiny -

Since the virus is "primarily transmitted" to people via ticks on livestock, most cases are among farmers, slaughterhouse workers and veterinarians, the WHO says.

"Human-to-human transmission can occur resulting from close contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected persons," it adds.

Alongside uncontrolled bleeding, the virus causes intense fever and vomiting.

Medics fear there may be an explosion of cases following the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha in July, when families traditionally slaughter an animal to feed guests.

"With the increase in the slaughter of animals, and more contact with meat, there are fears of an increase in cases during Eid," said Azhar al-Assadi, a doctor specialising in haematological diseases in a hospital in Nasiriya.

Most of those infected were "around 33 years old", he said, although their age ranges from 12 to 75.

Authorities have put in place disinfection campaigns and are cracking down on abattoirs that do not follow hygiene protocols. Several provinces have also banned livestock movement across their borders.

Near Najaf, a city in the south, slaughterhouses are monitored by the authorities.

The virus has adversely hit meat consumption, according to workers and officials there.

"I used to slaughter 15 or 16 animals a day -- now it is more like seven or eight," said butcher Hamid Mohsen.

Fares Mansour, director of Najaf Veterinary Hospital, which oversees the abattoirs, meanwhile noted that the number of cattle arriving for slaughter had fallen to around half normal levels.

"People are afraid of red meat and think it can transmit infection," he said.

Y.Rahma--DT