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			 Researchers who followed more than 1,100 survivors of the Ebola 
			virus outbreak - which swept through West Africa in the world's 
			largest epidemic from 2013 to 2016 - found their mortality rates a 
			year after discharge from hospital were up to five times higher than 
			expected in general Guinean population. 
 Death rates were higher among those who were in hospital for longer, 
			the study found, suggesting that patients who had more severe cases 
			of Ebola may have yet higher post-disease risks.
 
 The findings show an urgent need for more investigation of the 
			long-term effects of Ebola infection, the researchers said, 
			especially since the number of Ebola survivors has risen 
			significantly with two large epidemics in the past five years.
 
 
			 
			A continuing outbreak of Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo has 
			become the world's second largest in history since it began in 
			August 2018. It has spread to infect almost 3,000 people in Congo so 
			far, killing two-thirds of them.
 
 In the survivor study, published on Wednesday in the Lancet 
			Infectious Diseases, scientists led by Ibrahima Socé Fall, an 
			emergency response expert at the World Health Organization, followed 
			1,130 Guinean survivors of the 2013-16 outbreak.
 
 Over a follow-up period of an average of 22 months, 59 deaths were 
			reported, of which 37 were tentatively attributed to renal failure 
			based on reports by family members of the symptoms suffered by their 
			dead loved one, the researchers said.
 
			
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			It was not possible to give the exact cause or date of death for 
			many patients, they said, since there were few medical documents or 
			autopsies available. Case studies of patients with Ebola, however, 
			have found that the virus can be detected in urine - showing it can 
			infect the kidney - and that some patients with Ebola develop acute 
			kidney injury. 
			"Although cause of death evidence was weak for most patients, renal 
			failure is a biologically plausible cause of death in survivors of 
			Ebola virus disease," said Mory Keita, a medical doctor and 
			epidemiologist from Guinea who is now working with the WHO to help 
			control the Congo Ebola outbreak.
 Judith Glynn of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 
			who also worked on the research team, said the findings should help 
			emergency response experts focus resources towards higher-risk 
			groups. "Those hospitalised with Ebola for longer may be at greater 
			risk, and could be specifically targeted," she said.
 
 The 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa was the largest and 
			deadliest ever, killing more than 11,300 people of the 28,000 who 
			were infected.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland, Editing by William Maclean)
 
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