| 
		Ebola's spread shows how science needs 
		societies to succeed 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [June 17, 2019] 
		By Kate Kelland 
 LONDON - The persistence of Congo's Ebola 
		outbreak and its deadly spread to Uganda in recent days show how 
		societal issues are as crucial as scientific advances in controlling 
		disease outbreaks, specialists in global public health say.
 
 Medical scientists, prompted by a devastating West African Ebola 
		epidemic between 2013 and 2016, have worked fast to develop cutting edge 
		vaccines, treatments and antibody-based therapies they hoped would 
		prevent or halt future outbreaks of the virus. That includes an Ebola 
		vaccine developed by Merck & Co Inc that proved more than 95 percent 
		effective in clinical trials.
 
 But the current Ebola outbreak has continued to spread relentlessly 
		since it began in August 2018 in Democratic Republic Congo's North Kivu 
		province.
 
 It has infected more than 2,000 people, killing at least 1,400 of them. 
		And, in recent days, it reached Uganda, where several cases have been 
		recorded, all in people who had come across the border from Congo.
 
		
		 
		
 Public health experts say this underscores the importance of factors 
		beyond medicine - such as trust in authority, engagement and accurate 
		information - in successfully controlling outbreaks of infectious 
		diseases.
 
 "Even in the presence of sensitive rapid testing, drugs and a vaccine, 
		this Ebola outbreak has continued to burn on," said Ian Mackay, a 
		virologist and associate professor at the University of Queensland in 
		Australia.
 
 "The core drivers are all key human issues of trust, habits, fears and 
		beliefs. That is the mix that now underpins the spread of any disease."
 
 SOCIAL BARRIERS
 
 Those seeking ways to end the Congo Ebola outbreak's longevity and 
		persistence say the issues it raises go to the heart of what public 
		health means in the 21st century for countries across the world, rich 
		and poor.
 
 The World Health Organization cites mistrust of authorities in Congo, 
		with attacks on healthcare workers and patients avoiding treatment 
		centers, as major factor in the failure so far to contain the Ebola 
		outbreak. Similarly, it cites anti-vaccine misinformation campaigns in 
		the United States, Ukraine and elsewhere as allowing measles to spread 
		furiously among people who are fearful and confused.
 
 Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust medical charity and a 
		specialist in global health, draws parallels between the challenge of 
		containing Ebola in Congo and issues elsewhere, such as the surge of 
		cholera in Yemen and the spread of measles in Ukraine, the United States 
		and the Philippines.
 
 The barriers are more social than scientific, he says.
 
		"No public health can work without the support of the society it's in. 
		The science is clear in all of these things, but unless it has not just 
		tacit support, but engaged support, then public health really 
		struggles," Farrar said.
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			Mwamini Kahindo, an Ebola survivor working as a caregiver to babies 
			who are confirmed Ebola cases, holds an infant outside the red zone 
			at the Ebola treatment centre in Butembo, Democratic Republic of 
			Congo, March 25, 2019. REUTERS/Baz Ratner 
            
 
            A key factor has been greater international travel, and the 
			increased information sharing that comes with it. That is "a 
			double-edged sword", says Daniel Bausch, director of the UK public 
			health rapid support team and an expert on the Ebola virus.
 While improved communication flows can help public health 
			authorities track diseases and spread messages to people about how 
			to protect themselves, greater access to a vast range of information 
			can make the public become more skeptical of authority and can 
			spread misinformation, including about vaccines, Bausch said.
 
 "There is so much information flowing, it gets very difficult to 
			pick out the truth. This is not unique to Ebola or Africa — it's a 
			global problem," Bausch said.
 
 BUILDING TRUST
 
 Emmanuel André, a doctor and professor at Leuven University in 
			Belgium who has been working with people in Congo affected by 
			tuberculosis - another infectious disease - says the way to counter 
			distrust is to engage with people directly affected by a disease or 
			who have direct experience of a medicine to harness their 
			experience.
 
 "Medicine and public health have not yet learned how to deal with 
			humility and mistakes," he said.
 
 "How can we ask trust from the people in the North Kivu when 
			political authorities, United Nations agencies and international 
			NGOs have jointly failed to provide primary services - including 
			health? How can we ask them to expect that these same actors now 
			would be able to provide a solution?"
 
            
			 
			A study André conducted in Congo in 2014-2016 found in the detection 
			of tuberculosis - a disease that can spread widely if people with it 
			don't come forward for treatment - training volunteer screeners from 
			local communities, mainly people who had themselves been treated for 
			TB or had a family history of the disease, improved diagnosis rates 
			and engagement.
 
 "Building trust with the people is critical," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland. Editing by Cassell Bryan-Low)
 
		[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |