'Most
challenging' deadly disease outbreak: WHO speaks out on Ebola dangers
West
Africa is seeing the “most challenging” outbreak of Ebola virus
since the disease was discovered 40 years ago. It comes as the death
toll reaches over 100, the World Health Organization reported.
RT,
9
April, 2014
"This
is one of the most challenging Ebola outbreaks we have ever faced,"
Keiji Fukuda, assistant director-general of the World Health
Organization (WHO) told a news briefing.
The
most severe cases of the illness have had a 90 percent fatality rate,
and there is no vaccine, cure or specific treatment.
New
figures released by the WHO on Tuesday indicate there have been 157
suspected cases in Guinea, 101 of them fatal. Sixty-seven of the
cases were confirmed in WHO laboratories.
Ebola’s
symptoms are hemorrhagic fever, muscle pain, weakness, vomiting,
diarrhea and, in severe cases, organ failure and unstoppable
bleeding.
Also,
the WHO is concerned that the deadly virus is spreading
from the epicenter in the forests of southern Guinea.
"We
have not had an Ebola outbreak in this part of Africa before,"
Fukuda said.
The
virus is triggering
panic among the region’s population: last week, an angry crowd in
the south of Guinea attacked international aid workers, blaming them
for bringing the fever to Africa.
Concerning
that violent reaction, Fukuda stressed the importance of "getting
out as much accurate information as possible to communities and the
countries affected, reducing the rumors, so that people have facts to
work with."
The
organization doesn’t see an end to the epidemic anytime soon.
"We
fully expect to be engaged in this outbreak for another two, three,
four months,"
Fukuda told AFP.
Other
countries across West Africa have been bracing against the epidemic,
with Senegal closing
its border with Guinea. The situation is especially worrying for the
country, which depends on the tourist heavily industry, with 1
million visitors in 2011.
"We
have everything in place to take measures against Ebola. We have a
well-oiled system, which we are perfecting daily,"
Senegal's Health Minister Eva Marie Coll Seck told AFP on Tuesday.
In
Liberia, there have been 21 cases, including 10 fatalities, of which
five have been confirmed as Ebola. Also, Mali has seen nine suspected
cases, with tests so far showing two of them did not have the virus.
"Obviously
there is a risk that other countries might be affected, therefore we
absolutely need to remain vigilant,"
said Stephane Hugonnet, a WHO medical officer who recently returned
from Guinea.
Ebola
was first discovered in 1976 in what is currently the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
The
largest-ever outbreak was in 2000-01 in Uganda, with 425 cases, about
half of whom died, according to WHO estimates.
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