CORONA Guinea enters 'epidemic situation' as seven Ebola cases confirmed

jward

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Guinea enters 'epidemic situation' as seven Ebola cases confirmed

Health minister says officials ‘really concerned’ after three deaths from the infectious disease

Agence France-Presse
Sun 14 Feb 2021 10.38 EST First published on Sat 13 Feb 2021 17.32 EST


An MSF medical worker checking their protective clothing
The previous Ebola epidemic from 2013-16 began in Guinea and left 11,300 dead across the region. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images

Guinea has entered an Ebola “epidemic situation” with seven cases confirmed, including three deaths, a leading health official in the west African nation has said.
“Very early this morning, the Conakry laboratory confirmed the presence of the Ebola virus,” Sakoba Keita said after an emergency meeting in the capital.
The health minister, Remy Lamah, had earlier spoken of four deaths. It was not immediately clear why the new toll was lower.

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Ebola virus kills woman in Democratic Republic of Congo, health ministry says

The cases marked the first known resurgence of Ebola in west Africa since the 2013-16 epidemic that began in Guinea and killed more than 11,300 people across the region. The virus was first identified in 1976 in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).
A World Health Organization (WHO) representative in Conakry said the agency would send help quickly.


Keita, the head of the National Agency for Health Security, said one person had died in late January in Gouécké, south-east Guinea, near the Liberian border. The victim was buried on 1 February “and some people who took part in this funeral began to have symptoms of diarrhoea, vomiting, bleeding and fever a few days later”, he said.
Samples tested by a laboratory set up by the EU in Guéckédou, located in the same region, revealed the presence of Ebola in some of them on Friday, said Keita. He added that with a total of seven cases and three deaths, Guinea was in an “Ebola epidemic situation”.

The WHO representative Alfred George Ki-Zerbo told a press briefing: “We are going to rapidly deploy crucial assets to help Guinea, which already has considerable experience [treating the disease]. The arsenal is stronger now and we will take advantage of that to contain this situation as fast as possible.
“The WHO is on full alert and is in contact with the manufacturer [of a vaccine] to ensure the necessary doses are made available as quickly as possible to help fight back.”

The WHO has regarded each new Ebola outbreak since 2016 with great concern, treating the most recent one, in DRC, as an international health emergency.

In Guinea’s neighbour Liberia, the president, George Weah, put the country’s health authorities on heightened alert on Sunday. Weah “has mandated the Liberian health authorities and related stakeholders in the sector to heighten the country’s surveillance and preventative activities”, his office said in a statement.

No cases of Ebola had been detected in Liberia so far, it added. “The president’s instruction is intended to ensure Liberia acts proactively to avoid any epidemic situation, the kind Liberia witnessed in 2014.”

Weah also told health authorities “to immediately engage communities in towns and villages bordering Guinea and increase anti-Ebola measures”, the statement said.

DRC has faced several outbreaks of the illness, with the WHO on Thursday confirming a resurgence three months after authorities declared the end of the country’s latest outbreak. The country had declared the six-month epidemic over in November. It was the country’s eleventh Ebola outbreak, claiming 55 lives out of 130 cases.

The widespread use of vaccinations, which were administered to more than 40,000 people, helped curb the disease there.
The 2013-16 outbreak sped up the development of a vaccine against Ebola, with a global emergency stockpile of 500,000 doses planned to respond quickly to future outbreaks, the vaccine alliance Gavi said in January.

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jward

passin' thru
Helen Branswell
@HelenBranswell


Liberia's president puts health officials on alert after Guinea confirms cases of #Ebola near the Guinea-Liberia border. Horrible to see Ebola back in this part of the world. But at least this time they know Ebola & the dangers of not stopping it.

The #Ebola cases identified so far all attended the funeral of a nurse who die Jan. 28 and was buried Feb. 1. So, not that long ago. Good. But if the first case they saw is a health worker, there's a good chance there are other cases.
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jward

passin' thru
Xy5Z89
@Xy5Z89


#Africa #Guinea #DRCongo #Ebola According to reports from the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (ACDC) reports for Guinea and the Democratic Republic of the Congo that 14 cases of Ebola and nine deaths have been reported and so far no recovers are reported.

10:51 PM · Feb 22, 2021·Twitter for Android
After the last update, a new confirmed case, two new deaths and no new recoveries have been registered in the DRC, the ACDC said, adding that three new suspected cases have been reported in N'zerekore, Guinea. The ACDC sayed it will deploy emergency response teams in Guinea.
emergency meeting within experts and the ACDC is also planned. The 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola virus outbreak claimed over 11,300 lives, with over 28,600 recorded cases.
Ebola is a highly infectious hemorrhagic fever caused by a number of symptoms, including fever, vomiting, diarrhea, widespread pain or malaise and, in many cases, internal and external bleeding, which is frequently fatal and difficult to treat medically.
View: https://twitter.com/Xy5Z89/status/1364075466345357313?s=20
 
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