The deadliest Ebola epidemic ever
has now killed 2,793 in west Africa, the World Health Organization said Monday,
adding though that in Senegal and Nigeria the outbreak had been basically
contained.
The UN health agency, which also
published the results of the latest meeting of its Ebola emergency committee,
said a total of 5,762 people had been infected in five west African countries
as of September 18.
Guinea, where the outbreak began at
the start of the year, and neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone by far account
for most of the cases and continue to see ballooning numbers.
Liberia has been especially
hard-hit, with 3,022 cases and 1,578 deaths alone.
At the same time “the outbreaks in
Senegal and Nigeria are pretty much contained,” WHO said in a statement.
Senegal has not reported any new
cases of the deadly virus since it registered its first and only case on August
29 — a Guinean student who has since recovered.
And Nigeria, where 21 people have
been infected, eight of whom have died, has not reported any new cases since
September 8, WHO pointed out.
The incubation period for Ebola is
21 days, and double that time must pass without any new cases arising before a
country can be deemed transmission-free.
The WHO meanwhile said that a
meeting of its Ebola emergency committee last week had determined that the
outbreak remained a “public health emergency of international concern.”
The committee had reiterated its
opposition to general bans on international travel or trade, although people
infected with Ebola or who had had contact with Ebola patients should not be
permitted to travel, WHO said.
Blocking flights to or from affected
areas and other travel restrictions only serve to “isolate affected countries,
resulting in detrimental economic consequences, and hinder relief and response
efforts risking further international spread,” it warned.
The emergency committee also
stressed that in cases where measures like quarantines are deemed necessary,
countries must ensure that “they are proportionate and evidence-based, and that
accurate information, essential services and commodities, including food and
water are provided to the affected populations.”
It also insisted that “adequate
security measures” should be put in place to ensure the safety and protection
of healthcare workers, who face high infection rates and sometimes violence
from frustrated and frightened populations.
Last week, eight members of an Ebola
education team said to include local health officials and journalists, were
found dead after they were attacked by angry locals in southern Guinea.
The emergency committee urged the
affected countries to ramp up their response to the outbreak and called on all
countries to strengthen their preparedness through simulations and personnel
training.
Ebola Kills 2,793, Contained In Senegal, Nigeria – WHO
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Wednesday, September 24, 2014
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