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Authorities
in Liberia planned to discharge the country's last Ebola patient on Thursday.
It will take 42 days of no new cases for Liberia to be declared Ebola-free by
WHO standards, according to AP.
WHO officials
say the number of Ebola deaths taking place outside of hospitals still
remains high in Guinea and Sierra Leone, "suggesting that the need for
early isolation and treatment is not yet understood, accepted or acted
upon." WHO
had previously set a goal of isolating all Ebola cases and ensuring all burials
were safe by January 1.
Meanwhile
the World Health Organization will start large-scale testing of an experimental
Ebola vaccine in Guinea on Saturday to see how effective it might be in
preventing future outbreaks of the deadly virus.
AP report continues:
The
West African nations of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea have been hardest hit
in the yearlong Ebola outbreak, which has left more than 9,800 people dead. In
a statement Thursday, the U.N. health agency said the vaccine study will focus
on Basse Guinee, the region that has Guinea's most Ebola cases.
The
health agency's vaccination strategy in Guinea aims to create a buffer zone
around an Ebola case to prevent its further spread — an approach used to
eradicate smallpox in the 1970s. Officials will vaccinate people who have
already been exposed to Ebola cases and are at risk of developing the disease.
The
vaccine being tested — VSV-EBOV — was developed by Canada and is now licensed
to Merck. A second vaccine — one developed by U.S. National Institutes of
Health and GlaxoSmithKline — will be tested in a separate study as supplies
become available. The Guinea trial is being conducted with other health
partners including Doctors Without Borders, Epicentre, the Norwegian Institute
of Public Health and the Guinean government.
"If
a vaccine is found effective, it will be the first preventive tool against
Ebola in history," WHO chief Dr. Margaret Chan said in a statement.
Bertrand
Draguez, medical director of Doctors Without Borders, applauded the move, which
he called long overdue.
"For
more than a year, we have been racing around the clock to stop the epidemic
from spreading further," he noted.
On
Wednesday, WHO reported 132 new Ebola cases last week, an increase from the 99
cases reported the previous week. The agency said the spread of Ebola remains
"widespread" in Sierra Leone and noted that cases have jumped both
there and in Guinea.
WHO
said only about half of new Ebola patients in Guinea are connected to known
cases, meaning that health officials are unable to track where the disease is
spreading in the other half of cases. WHO also said unsafe traditional burials
— a high-risk factor for Ebola transmission — continue to occur in both Guinea
and Sierra Leone.
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