Haiti's cholera death toll increases to 369
According to information reaching here from Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital, the Haitian authorities said that the total number of infected people is 3,015.
The authorities said that 46 percent of the deaths were hospitalized patients, while the other 54 percent was the people without access to health services.
Spain's Secretary of Development Cooperation Soraya Rodriguez said in Madrid, Spain's capital, that it is urgent to set sanitary cordons in Haiti in order to stop the epidemic, which has been worsened by the effects of the earthquake occurred in February this year.
Cholera, a waterborne bacterial infection, is transmitted mainly through drinking contaminated water and unsanitary conditions. The Artibonite River, which irrigates Haiti's rural center and provides water for thousands of people, is believed to be the source of the outbreak.