Stop
Ebola campaign
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More than 26,000 people have been infected
with Ebola since the outbreak began and more than 10,800 have died, the World
Health Organization said Wednesday. The
UN health body also warned that the decline in confirmed cases appeared to have
stagnated, urging increased efforts to stop transmission of the deadly virus. In
all, 26,079 people have contracted the disease over the past 16 months, and
10,823 of them have died, almost all of them in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra
Leone.
After
tearing through the three countries like wildfire, the spread of the virus has
slowed to a crawl. In
the week leading to April 19, 33 new confirmed cases were reported, with 21 in
Guinea, 12 in Sierra Leone and none in Liberia.
Vanguard report continues:
That
compares to 37 new confirmed cases the week before, and 30 the week before
that.
“The
decline in confirmed cases of Ebola virus disease has halted over the last
three weeks,” the WHO said in its latest report.
“To
accelerate the decline towards zero cases will require stronger community
engagement, improved contact tracing and earlier case identification,” it said.
On
the bright side, Liberia, once the hardest hit country, has reported no new
cases of Ebola since the last confirmed case died on March 27 and was buried a
day later.
If
no new cases emerge, Liberia should be declared Ebola-free on May 9 — 42 days,
or two incubation periods, after the burial of the last confirmed victim.
–
163 unsafe burials –
The
situation was more mixed in Guinea.
The
21 new confirmed cases there marked a decrease from 28 a week earlier, and only
one new confirmed case was reported in the capital Conakry, down from six the
week before.
But
of 11 confirmed Ebola deaths during the week leading to Sunday, six died in
their communities with the diagnosis only made postmortem.
And
for three consecutive weeks, fewer than half of new cases have come from lists
of people known to have been in contact with Ebola patients, meaning health
authorities still lack a full overview of transmission chains.
Perhaps
most worrying: last week Guinea reported 163 unsafe burials of victims of the
highly contagious disease, up from 72 a week earlier.
The
WHO however said the sharp increase was likely due to more reporting of such
burials amid increased vigilance.
Community
resistance to efforts to halt the outbreak also continue to be a problem in
Guinea, where 11 people were sentenced Wednesday to life in prison for
murdering eight Ebola workers last September.
The
WHO said “instances of community resistance” had been reported in four
prefectures last week, and that Conakry had reported at least one such incident
a day for the past six weeks.
In
Sierra Leone, meanwhile, the 12 new confirmed cases there marked an increase on
the nine reported a week earlier.
Half
of the new cases were reported in the Western Area Urban, which includes the
capital Freetown.
As in Guinea, fewer than
half of new cases came off lists of known Ebola contacts in the week leading to
April 12 and last week, three cases of the disease were only discovered postmortem.
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