The
cases are the first in Guinea since the country was declared Ebola free at the
end of last year ©Cellou Binani (AFP)
|
Two people from the same
family have died from Ebola in Guinea, the government said Thursday, as the WHO
declared a flare-up of the virus in neighbouring Sierra Leone over.
AFP
report continues:
Test
samples from the two patients "revealed the presence of the Ebola
haemorrhagic fever virus", the government said in a statement, while
officials feared further suspected cases.
"For
now, we have two confirmed cases and three suspected cases," it added.
The
cases are the first in Guinea since the country was declared Ebola free at the
end of last year, and the UN health agency warned that a recurrence of the
tropical disease -- which has claimed 11,300 lives since December 2013 --
remained a possibility.
Two
cases of the virus were identified in Sierra Leone in early January, the first
cases since November last year.
A
22-year-old women died while her aunt survived.
WHO
declared that flare-up officially over on Thursday after no new cases were seen
for 42 days -- the length of two Ebola incubation cycles.
The
WHO refers to these isolated cases as "flare-ups" but maintains the
original "chains of transmission" have been stopped in Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone.
"WHO
continues to stress that Sierra Leone, as well as Liberia and Guinea, are still
at risk of Ebola flare-ups, largely due to virus persistence in some survivors,
and must remain on high alert and ready to respond," it said in a
statement.
The
health body's representative in Sierra Leone, Anders Nordstrom, said it was
"critical that we remain prepared".
The
virus can stay in semen for at least nine months after a patient has recovered,
six months longer than previously thought.
Scientists
are working to establish how long it can persist in other bodily fluids and
tissues such as the spinal column and the eye, and for how long it could remain
infectious.
"Until
the virus is completely cleared from the survivor population -- and that may
take the remainder of the year or more -- we have to anticipate and be prepared
for additional small outbreaks," a WHO representative told AFP.
-
Small outbreaks -
All
five of the new cases in Guinea were from the town of Korokpara in the southern
region of Nzerekore.
"The
health authorities have taken the appropriate measures to contain the spread of
the disease," the statement added.
The
WHO confirmed Guinea's new cases on its Twitter account.
A
source close to the local anti-Ebola coordination team told AFP that the two
deceased patients were a married couple who had both shown symptoms of vomiting
and diarrhoea.
"That
attracted the attention of local people who alerted the health services in
Nzerekore," he said on condition of anonymity.
Although
the outbreak -- the worst on record -- has officially claimed more than 11,300
lives since it first began in Guinea, a significant number of deaths are
believed to have gone unreported.
The
epidemic was first reported to have spread to Sierra Leone in May 2014, when
more than a dozen women contracted Ebola at the funeral of a healer who had
been treating patients from Guinea.
At
the peak of the outbreak that year, Sierra Leone and its neighbours Liberia and
Guinea were reporting hundreds of new cases each week, with social order on the
brink of collapse.
The WHO declared Guinea
Ebola-free on December 29, followed by Liberia on January 14.
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