US and Haitian health officials said Monday that the strain of cholera in the deadly outbreak in Haiti is not from the impoverished, quake-ravaged island
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The strain was identified last week by Haiti's National Public Health Laboratory (NPHL) as Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1, serotype Ogawa.
"Although these results indicate that the strain is non-Haitian, cholera strains may move between different areas due to global travel and trade," said Haitian Minister of Health Alex Larsen.
"Therefore, we will never know the exact origin of the strain that is causing the epidemic in Haiti. This strain was transmitted by contaminated food or water or an infected person," he said.
Global travel and trade provide many opportunities for infectious diseases such as cholera to spread from one country to another, the CDC said.
"In most instances, cholera does not spread widely within a country if drinking water and sewage treatment are adequate. When water and sewage treatment is inadequate, as in post-earthquake Haiti, cholera can spread rapidly," the US federal health agency said.
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"Our primary focus here is to save lives and control the spread of disease," said CDC medical epidemiologist Jordan Tappero, who is leading the CDC cholera response team in Haiti.
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Source-AFP