Posted on 09/20/2007 8:04:03 AM PDT by Mother Abigail
Congo's Ebola Outbreak Could Be Worst in Years
By Craig Timberg Washington Post Foreign Service Wednesday, September 19, 2007; Page A19
JOHANNESBURG, Sept. 18 -- International medical personnel and supplies are being airlifted to a remote region of central Congo to combat what threatens to become the world's most serious outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus in years.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
My mother was a missionary nurse in Central America, they are a special lot.
MA
I read “And The Band Played On” in hopes of finding the ‘real’ cause of AIDS, but it didn’t happen. That book started with a Danish doctor [female] who was doing research in Africa. Must’ve handled an infected monkey, but they never suggested that.
The Hot Zone looks very scary, but now I have to read it!
Destined to be a classic
Reminds me of Angola Marburg...
God save the people.
Ebola ping (in case you had not seen this)
“then where actually does hell exist?”
I think it is in new Jersey somewhere.:-)
No, its not.
Great book btw.
[Blank's] Bird Flu Outbreak Could Be Worst in Years - or not...
[Blank's] West Nile Virus Outbreak Could Be Worst in Years - or not...
[Blank's] AIDES Outbreak Could Be Worst in Years - or not...
[Blank's] [blank] Outbreak Could Be Worst in Years - or not...
Thanks for the ping. (Bump)
Ebola feared spreading in DR Congo
KINSHASA (AFP) A suspected death from Ebola virus has been reported in a new province in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo where more than 170 people are now feared to have died from the disease in four months.
The new case was in East Kasai, a central province neighbouring the West Kasai where the latest outbreak was first reported.
There have been many deaths at a health centre in the East Kasai town of Mwene-Ditu in recent days and samples from one that showed Ebola-like symptoms are being studied in Kinshasa, said Benoit Kebelo, a doctor heading a government emergency response team.
Mwene-Ditu is around 180 kilometres (110 miles) southeast of Kananga, capital of West Kasai province, where five Ebola cases and one of Shigella were confirmed on September 11.
Kebolo told AFP everyone should remain cautious about the cause of the latest death. He added that “increasing awareness” of Ebola among the population was leading to many reported symptoms that in most cases are not linked to the outbreak.
Two more patients died from Ebola and related illnesses this week around Kampungu, around 250km northwest of Kananga, and the centre of the new epidemic, Kebolo said.
These bring to 172 the number of confirmed dead out of 381 reported cases of patients suffering symptoms from various illnesses including Ebola, Shigella, which is similar, acute malaria or gastro-enteritis, according to a new World Health Organisation toll.
There is no known cure for Ebola, which causes massive internal bleeding, and on average is fatal in around 80 percent of cases. Shigella, a type of infectious dysentery, is treatable with antiobiotics, but is still fatal in around 40 percent of cases.
Symptoms of the epidemic — high temperature, bloody diarrhoea, visible hemorrhaging — were first seen on April 27 in the Kampungu region of West Kasai.
Around Kampungu, a WHO survey of the cases, shows a marked increase in the number of ill between August 22 and 31, with an average of 15 cases per day and a peak of 12 deaths on August 27.
In early September the spread of the diseases slowed. Over the past six days it fell to between one and two new registered cases a day, with only a maximum two deaths per day.
“It’s encouraging, but we must still be prudent in analysing this reduction,” Kebelo warned.
There is no certainty that the epidemic has ended, he added. It could be a remission during the incubation period for Ebola (15-21 days) “before a new explosion”, he cautioned.
Meanwhile, a team of 10 WHO officials — including a virologist, three epidemiologists and Canadian specialists in setting up laboratories — have arrived in Kananga and will be operational next week analysing samples.
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jorLnHv88v3LnQMXKsZK_IvoQ5RA
From the WHO....Ebola haemorrhagic fever in the Democratic Republic of the Congo - update 2
20 September 2007
The Ministry of Health (MoH) of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), with the support of international partners, is continuing field investigations to determine the extent of the outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in the Province of Kasai Occidental. Active surveillance is under way to investigate recent deaths in the affected communities, to identify other suspected cases and to follow-up on all contacts. Case numbers associated with the outbreak continue to rise and the situation has become further complicated by concomitant reports of cases of typhoid and Shigella dysenteriae type 1.
Isolation wards have been established in the area with the on-going support of a field team from Médecins Sans Frontières (Belgium). Additional isolation wards are also being established in three district hospitals. Epicentre has deployed an epidemiologist to support the MSF team in the field.
Outbreak response field teams are being strengthened and operational bases have been reinforced and established in three towns in the affected area. A central logistics platform is being finalized to provide support to local field communications, to put in place field accommodation facilities and to ensure basic living conditions. The United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) is providing additional logistics support.
Epidemiologists, virologists, laboratory experts and logisticians from the MoH, WHO, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) are in the field. Laboratory equipment and outbreak response materials are also being delivered by air with the assistance of MONUC, MSF-chartered flights, and by Interchurch Medical Assistance (IMA World Health), an international non-governmental organization.
MONUC has also assisted WHO in deploying vehicles and other outbreak related response equipment from its Outbreak Logistics Mobility Unit in Dubai. Further shipments of Personal Protective Equipment and specialist communications equipment including satellite phones and radios are also being sent to the country.
Social mobilization activities are being implemented by national field teams with the support of the national Red Cross, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and UNICEF. A medical anthropologist has been identified by the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, Paris to work with the social mobilization teams to develop culturally appropriate information concerning Ebola and to ensure the population is provided with information to reduce the risk of transmission of the disease.
Experts in infection control from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, the Hôpital Cantonal in Geneva and WHO Headquarters are being deployed to strengthen infection control in the affected area. Precautions are also being put in place health care settings in areas beyond the outbreak zone to reduce the risk of any amplification of the outbreak.
Other partners from the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network are also providing support to the MoH, including the African Field Epidemiology Network, the Bernard Nocht Institute, the Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville, the European Centre for Disease Control, the Institute Pasteur, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the National University of Singapore, the Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control, Training Programs in Epidemiology and Public Health Interventions Network Inc. and Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, USA.
The WHO Country Office in Kinshasa has been strengthened to provide support to the MoH in responding to external requests for information on this outbreak.
http://www.who.int/csr/don/2007_09_20/en/index.html
Minister dispels fears of an Ebola outbreak (Kenya)
By Elizabeth Mwai and Beatrice Obwocha
Thursday, 20th September
The Government has allayed fears that the mysterious disease that claimed two lives in Rift Valley Province is the dreaded Ebola.
This calms anxiety that has gripped the country that the Ebola outbreak reported in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) may have found its way to Kenya.
The deputy director of Medical Services, Dr Shahhanaaz Sharif, said the disease was not Ebola as there were no bleeding tendencies from the deceased.
Health Assistant minister Dr Wilfred Machage had on Tuesday told MPs that it was possible Ebola had struck parts of Nakuru District in Kuresoi constituency.
Machage had said the deaths of two women in the area in bizarre circumstances could either be attributed to Ebola or Rift Valley Fever.
Three women have died from the strange disease that has struck Rift Valley. Two of the women lived 15km apart while the third was a student. Sharif said the three patients had similar symptoms of headache, fever and pain in the joints. “There were no signs of bleeding from the three patients and we have ruled out a case of Ebola,” Sharif said.
Speaking at a city hotel during the official opening of a communication workshop, Shariff said they ministry would issue a full report once the specimen collected have been tested.
Sharif explained that Ebola was characterised by severe bleeding and was transmitted through close contact.
He said initial indicators show that the three deaths could be attributed to malaria, but this had to be verified after tests were carried out.
Sharif blamed the delay in conducting the tests on poor roads that have complicated the transportation of the specimen.
The doctor said it was highly unlikely that the disease could have come to Kenya and skipped Uganda, which is closer to the DRC.
Meanwhile, another person succumbed to a disease with similar symptoms in Molo.
A 58-year-old man died in Sirikwa on Tuesday night, tens of kilometres away from where the two women died.
Rift Valley Province Medical Officer, Dr John Odondi, confirmed the death and said he had deployed inspectors to the affected areas.
http://www.eastandard.net/hm_news/news.php?articleid=1143974823
Spreading fast.
I totally agree; I couldn’t sleep for weeks.
And I haven’t been to Reston since reading it.
This one’s a bad one. If they can keep it out of the cities they’ll be doing well. BTT.
Kenya: Foreigners Being Screened for Ebola
The Nation (Nairobi)
21 September 2007
Nairobi
The Government has started screening foreigners from the Congo Basin for possible cases of ebola before they are allowed into the country.
Health assistant minister Wilfred Machage made the revelation as he stated that the two recent deaths in Kuresoi, Molo District were not caused by the ebola.
Dr Machage declared the country clean of the dreaded disease that has killed hundreds in the Congo Basin.
The assistant minister said initial tests by the medical team from Nakuru have shown that the deaths of the two women, one aged 22 years and another one 31, were caused by malaria.
This was in response to a point of clarification from Nominated MP Ruth Oniang’o (Kanu), who had wanted to know if the Government had put in place an anti-ebola strategy. Prof Oniang’o said that a number of cases of the disease had been recorded in parts of Tanzania, which borders the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Kisumu Town East MP Gor Sunguh (Narc) urged the Government to put in place early warning measures to detect strange diseases, which have ravaged some parts of the world.
Dr Machage was giving a ministerial statement requested on Tuesday by Kuresoi MP Moses Cheboi (Kanu) on the deaths that had sent panic among his constituents.
The assistant minister said that a 17-year-old school girl, who was also suffering from a disease with similar symptoms of fever, headache, difficulties in breathing and chest congestion, was treated for malaria and had recovered.
Dr Machage said that they had put medical teams in the Rift Valley under alert and surveillance was high for any other case.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200709201190.html
FYI
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/44437/story.htm
Kenya Says Rift Valley Fever Returns, Two Dead
KENYA: September 21, 2007
NAIROBI - Rift Valley fever has killed two women in Kenya, the government said on Thursday, raising fears of another outbreak of the disease that claimed more than 150 lives earlier this year.
Officials had first worried that the two women who died in Nakuru district, a tourist hotspot, had the Ebola virus, which broke out last week in nearby Democratic Republic of Congo.
“This is not an Ebola outbreak, it is Rift Valley fever,” government spokesman Alfred Mutua told reporters in Nairobi.
Transmitted to humans by mosquito bites or close contact with contaminated animals, Rift Valley fever can cause havoc in Kenya’s important meat trade.
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