Nigeria reports one more Ebola case, 11
in total
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[August 14, 2014]
ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria has confirmed 11 cases of Ebola, after
a doctor who treated the Liberian man who brought the disease to Lagos
fell ill, the health minister said on Thursday.
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The doctor had been one of those involved in the initial treatment
of Patrick Sawyer, who collapsed at Lagos airport on July 20, Health
Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu told a news conference in the capital
Abuja.
A member of staff of West African regional economic body Ecowas this
week became the third person in Nigeria to die of the disease, which
has no proven cure and has killed more than 1,000 people across four
West African countries.
"Eight (others) are still alive, more than half of them are doing
very well and actually showing signs of recovery ... under
treatment," Chukwu said.
A nurse with Ebola, which she caught from Sawyer, skipped quarantine
in Lagos and headed to her home in the southeastern city of Enugu,
where she was suspected to have had contact with 20 other people.
However, Chukwu said after initial screening, they realized only six
people had been in contact with her, and they put those six under
surveillance.
A total of 169 people were under surveillance in Lagos, after eight
others were cleared, including all of Sawyer's primary contacts from
when he came in.
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The government also announced that Dangote Group, owned by Africa's
richest man Aliko Dangote, had donated $150 million to halt the
spread of the virus.
The World Health Organization has called this Ebola outbreak, whose
worst affected countries include Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia,
an international emergency. It has killed around 55 to 60 percent of
those have contracted the disease.
(Reporting by Camillus Eboh; Writing by Tim Cocks, editing by John
Stonestreet)
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