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GENEVA, May 29 (Xinhua) -- The World Health
Organization (WHO) will help support vaccination campaigns and set up a disease
surveillance system in Indonesia's quake-hit island of Java, the UN organization
said on Monday.
WHO will help organize vaccination campaigns against measles, which can be a major killer and spreads rapidly in
crowded areas, said a WHO statement.
It will also help to set up a disease surveillance
system in order to detect and control outbreaks of communicable diseases,
including diarrhoeal disease, the statement said.
Besides, WHO has sent vehicles loaded with medicines
and communications equipment into the quake-hit area, including with emergency
health kits containing drugs and medical supplies for 50,000 people for three
months, along with surgical kits to support 600 operations.
The devastating earthquake hit the island of Java on
Saturday. The latest available figures show that an estimated 5,000 people died
and several thousand were injured, including some 1,500 very seriously injured
patients who need urgent medical evacuation and care.
About 200,000 people are displaced from their homes.
Bantul District, south of the ancient city of Yogyakarta and with a population
of about 790,000, is reported to be the worst hit with the majority of houses
destroyed.
Prior to the earthquake there were already 29,000
internally displaced persons in the area who had been moved out of their
communities as a precautionary measure against the possible eruption of Mt.
Merapi.
Clean water, safe sanitation and waste removal will
rapidly be needed, particularly for people who have been displaced, in order to
prevent the spread of water-borne diseases, the WHO said. Enditem
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