AllAfrica.png

 

 

Ebola

 

UN Health Agency:

 

A Million People Have Been Isolated in a "Hot Zone"

 

 

UN News Service, AllAfrica.com, 13 August 2014

 

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today convened a United Nations system-wide
coordination meeting in response to the current Ebola outbreak in West
Africa, which is now affecting more than 1 million people in the so-called
"hot zone of disease transmission" on the borders of the three countries
most impacted by the disease.

 

According to the latest update issued today by the World Health Organization
(WHO), between 10 and 11 August, 128 new cases of Ebola virus disease, as
well as 56 deaths, were reported from Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra
Leone, bringing the total number of cases to 1,975 and deaths to 1,069.

 


The incubation period ranges from 2 to 21 days, but patients become
contagious only after the onset of symptoms. As symptoms worsen, the ability
to transmit the virus increases. As a result, patients are usually most
likely to infect others at a severe stage of the disease, when they are
visibly, and physically, too ill to travel.

 

WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan gave a bleak assessment on the
current Ebola outbreak in West Africa during a briefing yesterday to UN
Member States in Geneva, saying the outbreak has placed every city with an
international airport at risk of an imported case, and "no one is talking
about an early end to the outbreak."

 

"Decisions to seal off the hot zone of disease transmission, that is, the
area where the borders of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone intersect, are
critical for stopping the reinfection of areas via the cross-border movement
of people," Dr. Chan said.

 

"More than one million people are affected, and these people need daily
material support, including food," she said. 

 

"The isolation of this zone has made it even more difficult for agencies,
like MSF [Médecins Sans Frontières], to bring in staff and supplies."

 

At UN Headquarters today, the Secretary-General chaired a UN system-wide
coordination on Ebola and stressed the need for the entire UN system to
support the WHO's efforts in combatting the outbreak.

 

On Tuesday, Mr. Ban appointed Dr. David Nabarro as Senior United Nations
System Coordinator for Ebola, in support of the work done by Dr. Margaret
Chan and her team to counter the outbreak, which the agency has designated a
"public health emergency of international concern."

 

Dr. Nabarro, who joined the meeting with the Secretary-General today from
Geneva with the WHO Director-General, will be responsible for ensuring that
the UN system makes an effective and coordinated contribution to the global
effort to control the outbreak of Ebola.

 

Also Tuesday, a 12-member ethics panel convened by WHO announced that it is
ethical to treat Ebola patients with experimental drugs to counter the
largest, most severe and most complex outbreak of Ebola virus disease in
history.

 

On the operational side, WHO says it is finalizing its strategic operations
response plan and expects to share this with countries and partners in the
coming days. Mapping is also underway to develop an operational picture in
order to coordinate and move people and materials to areas of greatest need.

 

The UN health agency says that standard measures, like early detection and
isolation of cases, contact tracing and monitoring, and rigorous procedures
for infection control, have stopped previous Ebola outbreaks including those
in Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, as well as Gabon, and can
do so again.

 

Six months into the outbreak, fear is proving to be the most difficult
barrier to overcome. Fear causes contacts of cases to escape from the
surveillance system, families to hide symptomatic loved ones, and patients
to flee treatment centres.

 

The Ebola virus is highly contagious, but is not airborne. Transmission
requires close contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person, as can
occur during health-care procedures, home care, or traditional burial
practices, which involve the close contact of family members and friends
with bodies.

 

The incubation period ranges from 2 to 21 days, but patients become
contagious only after the onset of symptoms. As symptoms worsen, the ability
to transmit the virus increases. As a result, patients are usually most
likely to infect others at a severe stage of the disease, when they are
visibly, and physically, too ill to travel.

 

 

From: http://allafrica.com/stories/201408140567.html

 

 

 

 

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