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18/04/2015

A strange disease had suddenly broken out in the sleepy community five days ago, leading to the death of no fewer than 28 people, according to Ebola Alert.

Residents say the disease, whose cause remained unknown, spread rapidly around the community, killing its victim within 24 hours. The disease has been shown to not be Ebola. - Premium Times

04/11/2014

The worst-ever outbreak of Ebola virus is stretching the medical capacities of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone -- the three West African countries hit worst by the virus -- and alarming leaders around the world.

22/10/2014

House-to-house, street-to-street information campaigns, messages on local radio stations, in local dialects, all were used to explain the level of risk that posed, important for effective personal preventive measures and hygiene.

Photo: WHO/A. Esiebo

20/10/2014

CONGRATULATIONS NIGERIA! Declared by World Health Organization (WHO)
We hope we can conquer HIV & AIDS, Malaria and other life threatening diseases with the same enthusiasm! Kudos to the Federal Ministry of Health and all Nigerians who worked hard to make sure the disease was kept at bay!

22/09/2014

The Deputy Incident Manager, Dr. Olukayode Oguntimehin, who doubles as the Permanent Secretary of the Lagos State Primary Healthcare board, addresses press at the Hajj Camp on Ports Health process towards ensuring safety of travelers..

The Nigerian Ports of Entry protocol now requires that all travelers going out and entering the country are screened. The screening exercise ensures that travelers showing Ebola-like symptoms are identified early and taken aside for further investigation.

While there is no new case of Ebola in Nigeria, the country is dedicated to ensuring anyone suspected of having Ebola is identified and provided with the support they need.

(c) Photo Credit: WHO/Andrew Esiebo

19/09/2014

Ebola Fast Facts

16/09/2014

“Everything we have seen … indicates that Ebola is not spread by casual contact; Ebola is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids of a sick person, or exposure to objects such as needles that have been contaminated.” - U.S. Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Tom Frieden

16/09/2014

80m Nigerians without electricity, says UN

14/09/2014

Ebola In The Air? A Nightmare That Could Happen Experts fear that Ebola will mutate and become spreadable via cough or sneeze Ebola is an RNA virus, meaning every time it copies itself, it mutates Most mutations mean nothing, but some could change the way the virus behaves
Today, the Ebola virus spreads only through direct contact with bodily fluids, such as blood and vomit. But some of the nation's top infectious disease experts worry that this deadly virus could mutate and be transmitted just by a cough or a sneeze.
"It's the single greatest concern I've ever had in my 40-year public health career," said Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. "I can't imagine anything in my career -- and this includes HIV -- that would be more devastating to the world than a respiratory transmissible Ebola virus."
Osterholm and other experts couldn't think of another virus that has made the transition from non-airborne to airborne in humans. They say the chances are relatively small that Ebola will make that jump. But as the virus spreads, they warned, the likelihood increases.
Every time a new person gets Ebola, the virus gets another chance to mutate and develop new capabilities. Osterholm calls it "genetic roulette."
As of Friday, there have been 4,784 cases of Ebola, with 2,400 deaths, according to the World Health Organization, which says the virus is spreading at a much faster rate now than it was earlier in the outbreak.
Ebola is an RNA virus, which means every time it copies itself, it makes one or two mutations. Many of those mutations mean nothing, but some of them might be able to change the way the virus behaves inside the human body.
"Imagine every time you copy an essay, you change a word or two. Eventually, it's going to change the meaning of the essay," said Dr. C.J. Peters, one of the heroes featured in "The Hot Zone."
That book chronicles the 1989 outbreak of Ebola Reston, which was transmitted among monkeys by breathing. In 2012, Canadian researchers found that Ebola Zaire, which is involved in the current outbreak, was passed from pigs to monkeys in the air.
Dr. James Le Duc, the director of the Galveston National Laboratory at the University of Texas, said the problem is that no one is keeping track of the mutations happening across West Africa, so no one really knows what the virus has become.
One group of researchers looked at how Ebola changed over a short period of time in just one area in Sierra Leone early on in the outbreak, before it was spreading as fast as it is now. They found more than 300 genetic changes in the virus.
"It's frightening to look at how much this virus mutated within just three weeks," said Dr. Pardis Sabeti, an associate professor at Harvard and senior associate member of the Broad Institute, where the research was done.
Even without mutating, the virus has overwhelmed efforts to stop it.
The group Doctors Without Borders says Monrovia, Liberia, needs 1,000 beds for Ebola patients but has only 240, and it has had to turn patients away, sending them back to neighborhoods where they will probably infect more people.
This week, a Pentagon spokesman said the United States is sending a 25-bed field hospital to Monrovia.
"A 25-bed hospital with nobody to staff it? That's not the scale we need to be thinking about," Le Duc said. "It's an absolute embarrassment. When there was a typhoon in the Philippines, the Navy was there in 48 hours and had billions of dollars in resources."
Osterholm commended groups like Doctors Without Borders but said uncoordinated efforts by individual organizations are no match for Ebola spreading swiftly through urban areas.
"This is largely dysfunctional. Nobody's in command, and nobody's in charge," he said. "It's like not having air traffic control at an airport. The planes would just crash into each other."
By Elizabeth Cohen,
Senior Medical Correspondent, CNN

12/09/2014

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's charitable foundation on Thursday will announce it is donating $9 million to support Ebola efforts in the U.S.

11/09/2014

Breaking News: OAU Student tested and result is NEGATIVE of .

10/09/2014

WHO to Train Ambulance Drivers

10/09/2014

No Saudi ban over Ebola for Nigerians going on haj: Arab News

10/09/2014

U.S. Will Help Mobilize Additional African Health Workers To Combat the Ebola Outbreak

Nigeria has recorded another Ebola case, the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, said Monday. Mr. Chukwu said the new ...
08/09/2014

Nigeria has recorded another Ebola case, the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, said Monday. Mr. Chukwu said the new case is the fiance of one of the primary contacts of the index case, Patrick Sawyer. Mr. Sawyer is the Liberian-American who brought the virus to Nigeria late July. Mr. Chukwu said the primary contact had, however, made a fully recovery. The new case brings the total number of Ebola cases in Nigeria to 19 with seven people dead from the disease while 10 others have recovered, the minister said. He also noted that the sister of the Port Harcourt doctor, Ikechukwu Enemuo, who treated one of Mr. Sawyer’s primary contact in a hotel secretly, has fully recovered and been discharged. Mr. Chukwu said with the latest developments, the total number of people under surveillance in Lagos have reduced to 27 while Port Harcourt has 477. He also said that five people have been discharged from the Port Harcourt isolation center following completion of the 21 days observation period. He dispelled rumours of an outbreak of the disease in any other state or city in Nigeria, outside of Lagos and Port Harcourt, Rivers State. He said Nigeria currently has only one Ebola patient — the wife of Mr. Enemuo — whom he said was already recovering and would soon be discharged. - See more at: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/167860-lagos-records-another-%e2%80%8bebola-%e2%80%8bcase.html .bugTXW65.kdR2dSpC.dpuf

There are now 19 confirmed cases of the disease in Nigeria with seven dead.

06/09/2014

Ebola: How bad can it get?

This isn't just the worst single Ebola outbreak in history, it has now killed more than all the others combined.

Healthcare workers are visibly struggling, the response to the outbreak has been damned as "lethally inadequate" and the situation is showing signs of getting considerably worse.

The outbreak has been running all year, but the latest in an ongoing stream of worrying statistics shows 40% of all the deaths have been in just the past three weeks.

So what can we expect in the months, and possibly years, to come?

Taking off
Crystal ball gazing can be a dangerous affair.

Particularly as this is uncharted territory, previous outbreaks have been rapidly contained, affecting just dozens of people, this one has already infected more than 3,900.

But the first clues are in the current data.

Dr Christopher Dye, the director of strategy in the office of the director general at the World Health Organization, has the difficult challenge of predicting what will happen next.

He told the BBC: "We're quite worried, I have to say, about the latest data we've just gathered."

Ebola patient
Man outside his home just outside the Liberian capital Monrovia
Up until a couple of weeks ago the outbreak was raging in Liberia especially close to the epicentre of the outbreak in Lofa County and in the capital Monrovia.

However, the two other countries primarily hit by the outbreak, Sierra Leone and Guinea, had been relatively stable. Numbers of new cases were not falling, but they were not soaring either.

That is no longer true, with a surge in cases everywhere except some parts of rural Sierra Leone in the districts of Kenema and Kailahun.

"In most other areas, cases and deaths appear to rising, that came as a shock to me," said Dr Dye.

Cumulative deaths - up to 5 September
Ebola deaths
Only going up
The stories of healthcare workers being stretched beyond breaking point are countless.

A lack of basic protective gear such as gloves has been widely reported.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

If current trends persist we would be seeing not hundreds of cases per week, but thousands of cases per week and that is terribly disturbing”

Dr Christopher Dye
World Health Organization
The charity Medecins Sans Frontieres has an isolation facility with 160 beds in Monrovia. But it says the queues are growing and they need another 800 beds to deal with the number of people who are already sick.

This is not a scenario for containing an epidemic, but fuelling one.

Dr Dye's tentative forecasts are grim: "At the moment we're seeing about 500 new cases each week, those numbers appear to be increasing.

"I've just projected about five weeks into the future and if current trends persist we would be seeing not hundreds of cases per week, but thousands of cases per week and that is terribly disturbing.

"The situation is bad and we have to prepare for it getting worse"

The World Health Organization is using an educated guess of 20,000 cases before the end, in order to plan the scale of the response.

But the true potential of the outbreak is unknown and the WHO figure has been described to me as optimistic by some scientists.

International spread?
Map: Ebola outbreak in West Africa
The outbreak started in Gueckedou in Guinea, on the border with Liberia and Sierra Leone.

But it has spread significantly with the WHO reporting that "for the first time since the outbreak began" that the majority of cases in the past week were outside of that epicentre with the capital cities becoming major centres of Ebola.

Additionally one person took the infection to Nigeria, where it has since spread in a small cluster and there has been an isolated case in Senegal.

Prof Simon Hay, from the University of Oxford, will publish his scientific analysis of the changing face of Ebola outbreaks in the next week.

He warns that as the total number of cases increases, so does the risk of international spread.

He told me: "I think you're going to have more and more of these individual cases seeding into new areas, continued flows into Senegal, Cote d'Ivoire, and all the countries in between, so I'm not very optimistic at the moment that we're containing this epidemic."

Children
Children watch as another dead body is taken from their village
There is always the risk that one of these cases could arrive in Europe or north America.

However, richer countries have the facilities to prevent an isolated case becoming an uncontrolled outbreak.

The worry is that other African countries with poor resources would not cope and find themselves in a similar situation to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

"Nigeria is the one I look at with great concern, if things started to get out of control in Nigeria I really think that, because of its connectedness and size, that could be quite alarming," said Prof Hay.

End game?
It is also unclear when this outbreak will be over.

Officially the World Health Organization is saying the outbreak can be contained in six to nine months. But that is based on getting the resources to tackle the outbreak, which are currently stretched too thinly to contain Ebola as it stands.

There have been nearly 4,000 cases so far, cases are increasing exponentially and there is a potentially vulnerable population in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea in excess of 20 million.

Continue reading the main story
Ebola casualties
Up to 5 September
2,105
Ebola deaths - probable, confirmed and suspected
1,089 Liberia
517 Guinea
491 Sierra Leone
8 Nigeria
Source: WHO
Getty
Prof Neil Ferguson, the director of the UK Medical Research Council's centre for outbreak analysis and modelling at Imperial College London is providing data analysis for the World Health Organization.

He is convinced that the three countries will eventually get on top of the outbreak, but not without help from the rest of the world.

"The authorities are completely overwhelmed, all the trends are the epidemic is increasing, it's still growing exponentially, so there's certainly no reason for optimism.

"It is hard to make a long-term prognosis, but this is certainly something we'll be dealing with in 2015.

"I can well imagine that unless there is a ramp-up of the response on the ground, we'll have flair ups of cases for several months and possibly years."

It is certainly a time-frame which could see an experimental Ebola vaccine, which began safety testing this week, being used on the front line.

If the early trials are successful then healthcare workers could be vaccinated in November this year.

Here forever
But there are is also a fear being raised by some virologists that Ebola may never be contained.

Prof Jonathan Ball, a virologist at the University of Nottingham, describes the situation as "desperate".

His concern is that the virus is being given its first major opportunity to adapt to thrive in people, due to the large number of human to human transmission of the virus during this outbreak of unprecedented scale.

Map showing Ebola outbreaks since 1976
Ebola is thought to come from fruit bats, humans are not its preferred host.

But like HIV and influenza, Ebola's genetic code is a strand of RNA. Think of RNA as the less stable cousin of DNA, which is where we keep out genetic information.

It means Ebola virus has a high rate of mutation and with mutation comes the possibility of adapting.

Prof Ball argues: "It is increasing exponentially and the fatality rate seems to be decreasing, but why?

"Is it better medical care, earlier intervention or is the virus adapting to humans and becoming less pathogenic? As a virologist that's what I think is happening."

There is a relationship between how deadly a virus is and how easily it spreads. Generally speaking if a virus is less likely to kill you, then you are more likely to spread it - although smallpox was a notable exemption.

Prof Ball said "it really wouldn't surprise me" if Ebola adapted, the death rate fell to around 5% and the outbreak never really ended.

"It is like HIV, which has been knocking away at human to human transmission for hundreds of years before eventually finding the right combo of beneficial mutations to spread through human populations."

Collateral damage
Malaria carrying mosquito
Malaria season is starting in West Africa
It is also easy to focus just on Ebola when the outbreak is having a much wider impact on these countries.

The malaria season, which is generally in September and October in West Africa, is now starting.

This will present a number of issues. Will there be capacity to treat patients with malaria? Will people infected with malaria seek treatment if the nearest hospital is rammed with suspected Ebola cases? How will healthcare workers cope when malaria and Ebola both present with similar symptoms.

And that nervousness about the safety of Ebola-rife hospitals could damage care yet further. Will pregnant women go to hospital to give birth or stay at home where any complications could be more deadly.

The collateral damage from Ebola is unlikely to be assessed until after the outbreak.

No matter where you look there is not much cause for optimism.

The biggest unknown in all of this is when there will be sufficient resources to properly tackle the outbreak.

Prof Neil Ferguson concludes: "This summer has there have been many globally important news stories in Ukraine and the Middle East, but what we see unfolding in West Africa is a catastrophe to the population, killing thousands in the region now and we're seeing a breakdown of the fragile healthcare system.

"So I think it needs to move up the political agenda rather more rapidly than it has."

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Ebola virus disease (EVD)
Ebola virus
Symptoms include high fever, bleeding and central nervous system damage
Spread by body fluids, such as blood and saliva
Fatality rate can reach 90% - but current outbreak has mortality rate of about 55%
Incubation period is two to 21 days
There is no proven vaccine or cure
Supportive care such as rehydrating patients who have diarrhoea and vomiting can help recovery
Fruit bats, a delicacy for some West Africans, are considered to be virus's natural host
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