Deadly
disease Ebola poses 'very serious threat' to Britain
Times of India,
30 July, 2014
LONDON: The Ebola outbreak in west Africa poses a "very serious threat" to Britain, foreign secretary Philip Hammond said on Wednesday, as England's public health authority warned the virus was out of control.
Hammond
was to chair a meeting of COBRA, the government's crisis response
committee, to assess Britain's preparations to cope with any possible
outbreak of the disease.
One
person in Britain has been tested for Ebola, the Department of Health
(DoH) ministry confirmed, but the tests proved negative.
Reports
suggested he had travelled from west Africa to central England.
Health
professionals have been warned to be vigilant for signs of the deadly
virus.
"As
far as we are aware, there are no British nationals so far affected
by this outbreak and certainly no cases in the UK," Hammond told
Sky News television.
"However,
the prime minister does regard it as a very serious threat and I will
be chairing a COBRA meeting later today to assess the situation and
look at any measures that we need to take either in the UK, or in our
diplomatic posts abroad in order to manage the threat.
"We
are very much focused on it as a new and emerging threat which we
need to deal with."
Since
March, there have been 1,201 cases of Ebola and 672 deaths in Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Ebola
can kill victims within days, causing severe fever and muscle pain,
vomiting, diarrhoea and, in some cases, organ failure and unstoppable
bleeding.
Dr
Brian McCloskey, director of global health at Public Health England
(PHE), said the body was closely monitoring developments in west
Africa.
"It's
clear the outbreak is not under control," he said in a
statement.
"The
continuing increase in cases, especially in Sierra Leone, and the
importation of a single case from Liberia to Nigeria, is a cause for
concern, as it indicates the outbreak is not yet under control. We
will continue to assess the situation and provide support as
required.
"We
have alerted UK medical practitioners about the situation in west
Africa and requested they remain vigilant for unexplained illness in
those who have visited the affected area."
However,
he added: "The risk of a traveller going to west Africa and
contracting Ebola remains very low, since Ebola is transmitted by
direct contact with the blood or bodily fluids of an infected
person."
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