<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/11/international/africa/11angola.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

April 11, 2005

Health Workers Race to Block Deadly Virus in Angolan Town
 By SHARON LaFRANIERE


ÍGE, Angola, April 10 - Larrinda Pinto died Thursday, probably unaware of
the frantic effort that would follow by emergency medical workers hoping to
block the spread of the Marburg virus that claimed her life.

 Someone alerted one of the mobile teams of health workers that scour
neighborhoods here daily that Mrs. Pinto, a 42-year-old pediatric nurse,
appeared to have become another victim of the Marburg epidemic, which is
centered in this northern province, also called Uíge.

 Her death was quickly noted in white chalk on a blackboard hung on the
second-story landing of the run-down, salmon-colored building where World
Health Organization workers with two-way radios try to track the deadly
virus's spread.

 By Friday, workers clad in white protective suits located Mrs. Pinto's
small mud-brick home, festooned with clotheslines, and persuaded her family
to let them wrap her body in plastic and bury it immediately in the town
cemetery.

 On Sunday morning, two World Health Organization workers were back,
copying the names and ages of 14 relatives and 7 neighbors who had been in
close contact with Mrs. Pinto. For the next three weeks, they promised,
they would check on them daily. By Monday, they would disinfect the house.

 The workers' effort is organized, determined, swift. But not as swift as
the epidemic, which as of Sunday had claimed at least 193 lives, almost all
in the past month. And possibly not effective enough - at least for now -
to save families like Mrs. Pinto's.

 The race to contain the outbreak of Marburg, a deadly relative of the
better-known Ebola virus, is centered here in the town of Uíge (pronounced
weezh), where health officials fear the makings of a public health disaster
that could spread elsewhere in Angola and beyond.

 The number of victims is already the largest ever recorded from a Marburg
outbreak, and there is no effective treatment. Nine out of 10 people who
get the virus die, usually within a week.

 The first cases of the virus were identified in the pediatric ward where
Mrs. Pinto had worked. Despite incessant warnings on local radio that
families of the sick should neither treat them at home nor touch them if
they die, Mrs. Pinto's family cared for her in their house and prepared her
for burial. The virus is spread by bodily fluids, and even stray drops of
spittle or beads of sweat can lead to death.

 "We heard on the radio that we were not supposed to do it, but out of
emotion, we touched the body," said her husband, Antonio, 53. "We washed
her when she was alive and after she died."

 He also knew about the isolation unit set up at Uíge's regional hospital,
where Mrs. Pinto had worked for 20 years. But he refused to take her there,
he said, because "people believe the isolation unit is making people die."

 Cases like this, epidemiologists here say, show how much remains to be
done before the Marburg virus is contained here. But Dr. Nestor
Ndayimirije, an epidemiologist and leader of the World Health
Organization's efforts in Uíge, said he that believed headway was being
made.

 "If we compare with previous weeks, when we had 10 to 15 cases a day, now
we have 4 to 5 cases a day," he said. "I am certain we will control this
epidemic if we work more with the communities."

 Antonio Pinto has now taped two photos of his wife, the mother of his six
children, on his home's wall. In one, she wears a long rose-colored dress.
In the other, she stands proudly before a medical cabinet, wearing her
white nurse's uniform.

 Yolanda, her 20-year-old daughter, described her as a devoted, sympathetic
nurse who kept working in the pediatric ward long after the virus began
claiming hospital workers as well as patients.

 The two say they are not afraid. "Even though we held her, did everything
for her, I don't fear," said Mr. Pinto, dressed in black as he sat Sunday
morning in his dirt yard. "I trust in God."

 But he is also filled with questions. Why is there no vaccine? What
precautions can his family take now? How long will the epidemic last?

 Dr. Ndayimirije's answer to the last query is not comforting. "Usually
three months," he said.

 The virus is named for the town in Germany where it was first identified
in 1967 after laboratory workers were infected by monkeys from Uganda.

 Scientists do not know the source of the virus or how this outbreak began.
But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta confirmed the
first Marburg case in Uíge on March 8. That suggests that two months more
of illness and deaths like Mrs. Pinto's lie ahead.

-- 
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R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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