Cholera
Updated
global high
Source-backed reference: Cholera
Plain-English overview
Cholera causes severe dehydration from contaminated water or food in outbreak settings. WHO and national ministries publish outbreak news and travel guidance.
What official signals usually mean here
A signal is usually a WHO Disease Outbreak News item, ministry bulletin, or travel health notice with case counts attributed to the reporting agency.
How OutbreakThreat tracks it
We link to the outbreak news page or PDF so readers can verify numbers and geography directly with the reporting body.
Official references
Below, “Latest signals” pulls from our index only when a publisher URL is attached. Open each alert for the full notice. How we label sources.
Current outbreak signals
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Open outbreak map- Cholera - Multi-country with a focus on countries experiencing current surges - Cholera - World Health Organization - event 2025-08-29
- Cholera - Angola - Cholera - World Health Organization - event 2025-03-28
What it is
These diseases are closely monitored globally because of severity, epidemic potential, or international travel relevance.
Symptoms (general)
Clinical presentations vary. Always rely on licensed clinicians and official case definitions for medical decisions.
How it spreads
Transmission routes differ by pathogen; follow WHO, CDC, ECDC, or national guidance for accurate, pathogen-specific information.
Prevention (general)
Travel, occupational, and clinical prevention measures are published by official agencies; we aggregate links and summaries only.
Why people track it
Cholera often appears in official dashboards when activity rises, investigations open, or travel rules change. OutbreakThreat does not estimate personal risk; we surface what agencies have already published so you can read the original notice in context.
What people look up about Cholera
- Cholera outbreak signals near me
- Cholera symptoms and official prevention pages
- How OutbreakThreat labels official vs emerging notices
Related locations
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Set up alertsOfficial sources & methodology
Clinical definitions and treatment live with licensed clinicians and agencies such as WHO, CDC, ECDC, or your national health service. OutbreakThreat summarizes publisher-linked signals and documents how we label credibility on our Sources page.
Related diseases
Related outbreak maps & guides
Related disease alerts
Browse source-linked notices on the alerts index filtered for Cholera.
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Set up alertsCommon questions
- What is Cholera in plain English?
- These diseases are closely monitored globally because of severity, epidemic potential, or international travel relevance.
- How does Cholera spread?
- Transmission routes differ by pathogen; follow WHO, CDC, ECDC, or national guidance for accurate, pathogen-specific information.
- Why do people track Cholera on OutbreakThreat?
- Official agencies publish situational updates, investigations, and environmental surveillance. OutbreakThreat links those updates in one place for situational awareness.
- What does "official" mean on OutbreakThreat?
- Official alerts come directly from a government health agency like WHO, CDC, FDA, or a state health department. We link to the original notice so you can read the full text and context.
- What is the difference between an outbreak alert and a confirmed outbreak?
- An alert on OutbreakThreat is a dated notice from an agency or reputable source. It might be an investigation update, a health advisory, or a surveillance report. It is not the same as a final case count or an officially declared outbreak. Agencies refine their wording as investigations continue.
- How often is outbreak data updated?
- We check our source agencies multiple times per day. New notices typically appear on OutbreakThreat within hours. Our editorial summaries are reviewed during business hours (Central Time).
- Can I get alerts for my home, school, or business?
- Yes. Paid plans let you save locations with a radius and receive email when a new agency notice matches your area and disease preferences. The map and alert index are always free to browse.
