Survivors of Cyclone Nargis are overwhelming Burma’s crumbling health service and it faces a "worst-case scenario" of disease outbreaks unless aid is ramped up, a UN health expert said today.
At a hospital in Bogalay, one of the hardest-hit Irrawaddy delta towns, local doctors were working around the clock to treat as many as 5,000 out-patients a day, Osamu Kunii of the UN children's fund said.
"They are exhausted. They are working long hours and they really need support," Mr Kunii, chief of health and nutrition for UNICEF in Burma, told
Reuters in a telephone interview.
Many survivors had laceration wounds on their backs and legs from the surge of water and debris whipped up by winds of 190 kph (120 mph), he said, citing reports from UNICEF field teams.
They also saw many cases of dehydration and diarrhoea, with the latter afflicting up to 20 per cent of children in some areas hit by the cyclone which killed nearly 23,000 people and left another 1.5 million destitute.
UNICEF was sending essential medicine kits to hospitals desperately short of supplies in the five declared disaster areas, home to 24 million people.
"They need sutures, bandages. They need blood, antibiotics, rehydration solutions for diarrhoea," Mr Kunii said. "They are full of patients and they cannot be treated properly due to a lack of human resources and drugs."
The military government has sent doctors into the delta eight days after the disaster, but Mr Kunii said a larger international response was needed. The regime has been criticised for its slow approval of visas for foreign aid experts.
Burma has a relatively large number of overseas-qualified doctors, but the government health system is in tatters after 46 years of military rule. The regime spends only a few dollars per person on its 53 million people, who already faced some of the highest rates of disease in Asia before the cyclone struck.