Red Cross Team Attacked While Burying Ebola Dead
CONAKRY, Guinea — Sep 24, 2014, 9:20 AM ET
By BOUBACAR DIALLO and SARAH DiLORENZO 
Associated Press

A Red Cross team was attacked while collecting bodies believed to be
infected with Ebola in southeastern Guinea, the latest in a string of
assaults that are hindering efforts to control West Africa's current
outbreak.

One Red Cross worker is recovering after being wounded in in the neck in
Tuesday's attack in Forecariah, according to Benoit Carpentier, a spokesman
for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Family members of the dead initially set upon the six volunteers and
vandalized their cars, said Mariam Barry, a resident. Eventually a crowd
gathered and headed to the regional health office, where they threw rocks at
the building.

The attack is the most recent in a series that have plagued teams working to
bury bodies, provide information about Ebola and disinfect public places.
The most shocking to date was the abduction and killing last week of a team
of several health officials and journalists in Guinea who were educating
people on how to avoid contracting Ebola.

Ebola is believed to have infected more than 5,800 people in Liberia, Sierra
Leone, Guinea, Nigeria and Senegal. The outbreak has grown into the world's
largest ever for the disease, partially because it went undetected for
months, began in a highly mobile area and has spread to densely populated
West African cities. Resistance to efforts to control the disease — from
outright denials that Ebola exists to fears that the very people sent to
combat it are in fact carriers — has frustrated efforts to end or even slow
the disease's spread in all three of the most affected countries, Liberia,
Sierra Leone and Guinea, say officials.

There are deeply held beliefs about how dead bodies should be treated and
buried in the region and teams that are forced to interfere with those
practices are often targeted, said the Red Cross spokesman, Carpentier. Much
of the resistance is in remote, insular areas, where attitudes change slowly
— a difficult task even on issues that aren't so sensitive as burials.

"You need to reach almost one person by one person, so they all understand
and there's not one person who doesn't believe and they drag the entire
village around by spreading wrong messages," he said.

The conventional methods used to control Ebola — isolating sick people and
tracing all their contacts — are buckling under the sheer size of the
outbreak. Public health experts are beginning to hope that vaccines now
being tested might eventually make an impact.

There is currently no licensed treatment or vaccine for Ebola, although some
patients have received experimental drugs and scientists are now testing two
vaccines.

Previously experts had said a drug or vaccine was unlikely to be ready in
time to help in this outbreak. But on Wednesday, the World Health
Organization said projected year-end quantities of vaccines could be large
enough to have some impact on controlling the disease.

That would make this the first Ebola outbreak in history to be tackled with
vaccines or medicines.

"It may be that without a vaccine, we may not be able to stop this
epidemic," said Dr. Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine and a co-discoverer of Ebola. "In this outbreak, we are
reaching the limit of what classic containment measures can achieve."

Even if vaccines and treatments aren't ready in time for this outbreak,
scientists must prepare for the next one, said Jeremy Farrar, director of
Welcome Trust.

"We must be in a position where this is the last outbreak of Ebola where we
do not have any vaccines or treatments available," he said.

———

DiLorenzo reported from Dakar, Senegal. AP medical writer Maria Cheng
contributed from London.

 

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

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