The
WHO also approved the use of untested drugs on patients Wednesday, reports RT.
The
supplies of a vaccine and an experimental drug called Zmapp are limited, and it
may take months to develop more of them.
Canada,
which has said it will donate 1,000 samples of an experimental Ebola vaccine,
has said that they should be given to health care workers, because of the
increased risk they have of contacting the disease.
The
head of Canada’s Public Health Agency, Dr. Gregory Taylor, has said that he
sees the vaccines as a “global
recourse.”
Zmapp
is one of handful of Ebola drugs, which has been shown in trials to work on
animals. This has been requested by the Liberian government and contains a
cocktail of antibodies that attacks proteins on the surface of the Ebola virus.
Another
more available option would be to use serum from people who have survived the
virus. Serum is a part of the blood that could contain particles to neutralize
the virus.
However, experts warn that the only way of being certain that a drug or vaccine is effective is to try and use it in countries effected by Ebola.
Reuters
/ Tarik Jasarevic
|
Meanwhile the World Health Organization
(WHO) has said that Kenya is at “high risk” of the spread of the deadly Ebola
virus because it is a major transport hub, with several flights a day to West
Africa where the disease is running riot.
This is the most serious warning to date that the
disease could spread to East Africa. So far it has been limited to West Africa,
where it has ravaged Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, killing more than 1,000
people.
No comments:
Post a Comment