Ebola
deaths near 4,500 as virus spreads in West Africa: WHO
Send a link to a friend
[October 16, 2014]
MONROVIA (Reuters) - A total of
4,493 people have died from the world's worst Ebola outbreak on record,
and the situation in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone is deteriorating,
the World Health Organization said on Wednesday.
|
WHO said a total of 8,997 confirmed, probable and suspected cases of
Ebola had been reported in seven countries as of Oct. 12, with the
vast majority of these in the three West African nations.
In Spain and the United States, a handful of healthcare workers are
ill, while Senegal and Nigeria appear to have prevented further
spread of the disease, the WHO said.
"It is clear...that the situation in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra
Leone is deteriorating, with widespread and persistent transmission
of (Ebola)," the WHO report stated.
In Guinea 843 people have died of the disease and an increase in new
cases was driven by a spike in infection in the coastal capital
Conakry and the nearby district of Coyah.
In Liberia, the U.N. health agency said that problems with data
gathering made it hard to draw conclusions about the evolution of
the epidemic, with the number of cases in the capital Monrovia
almost certainly significantly under-reported.
The United States is deploying up to 4,000 troops to West Africa to
help contain an outbreak of the hemorrhagic fever with the bulk of
the effort targeting Liberia.
They are building 17 Ebola Treatment Units (ETUs) across the
country, a task that should be completed by the end of the year
according to Ben Hemingway, the team leader for aid agency USAID's
Disaster Assistance Response in Liberia.
Six such units are already up and running, he said.
"We see the ETUs as a referral system, but there will also be
community care centers established throughout the counties,"
Hemingway said.
[to top of second column] |
"The idea is that you will be able to get care closer to home so
that if you are confirmed with Ebola you will be able to be moved to
the unit (ETU) for a longer care there."
Nearly half of all the deaths in the latest outbreak have happened
in Liberia. However, the number of cases appears to be falling in
Liberia's northern Lofa county, the former epicenter of the outbreak
on the border with Guinea, it said.
In Sierra Leone, transmission of the disease was rampant with 425
new cases between Oct. 6 and Oct. 12, WHO said, with the capital
Freetown and the neighboring western districts of Bombali and Port
Loko the hardest hit.
(Reporting by James Harding Giahyue; Additional reporting and
writing by Joe Bavier in Abidjan and Daniel Flynn in Dakar; Editing
by David Lewis, Sonya Hepinstall and Lisa Shumaker)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|