 The World Health Organization has enlightened the 21 local government area health educators on the outbreak of cholera, monkeypox and other diseases as a result of flood that ravaged the Damora communities. The state coordinator of the World Health Organization, Ahem and Tessie, said its awareness became necessary for the health educators so as to step it down to their people at the grassroots. According to him, the outbreak of cholera, monkeypox and other diseases is worrisome, hence the need for the organization and critical stakeholders to step in in order to fight the diseases to the minimum. The sequelae in small small pockets are not linked again and these are sources of water in most places. But it's not the water that is a problem. It is the behavior, our own behavior of open defecation. We thought having as two infectious tools contaminated those waters, you will not have cholera, even if you take it with all the mud. The mud doesn't give you any cholera. And even when we have it, even when we have those diarrhea or vomiting or without vomiting, with water and diarrhea, sometimes we will not go to where we can get help. And we will go to where we can get help. Sometimes the help is just for the individual, it's not for the general community. What do I mean by the general community? The general community is not made aware that something like this is happening and this is what they should do to protect themselves from it. So there's need for our communities to know about this disease, how it presents itself, what causes it and also how it is going to be prevented.