The Head of
Liberia's Incident Management System (IMS), Tolbert Nyenswah
|
Liberia has discharged
its last two known Ebola patients from a treatment centre, beginning its third
countdown to become free from transmission of the deadly virus, health
authorities said Friday. Three cases were reported Nov. 20 in Liberia — one of the
three West African countries hit hardest by the worst ever Ebola outbreak. One
of them, a 15-year-old boy, died Nov. 23.
Associated Press report continues:
The
boy, who lived in the eastern Paynesville district, was Liberia's first Ebola patient
since it was declared Ebola-free for a second time in September. The boy's
father and brother were released Thursday after recovering from Ebola and have
reunited with their families, said Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah.
"We
don't have any confirmed cases anywhere in the country that we know
about," said Nyenswah, who is also the head of Liberia's Ebola Case
Management System.
He
said the 42-day countdown to become free from transmission of the deadly virus
started Thursday. The World Health Organization declares that Ebola disease
transmission has ended when the country goes through two incubation periods —
21 days each — without a new case emerging.
Local
and international health authorities are using gene sequencing to investigate
the source of the latest outbreak.
"What
we know is that it is not a virus that is imported; it is a virus that has been
in Liberia," he said, though he warned: "Globally Ebola is not over
yet."
More
than 11,300 people have died during the outbreak, which was first confirmed in
March 2014 and has been concentrated in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea,
according to WHO. Liberia has recorded more than 4,800 deaths and more than
10,600 cases.
Liberia was first declared
Ebola-free May 9, but new cases emerged in June resulting in two deaths. WHO
declared the country Ebola-free again on Sept. 3.
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