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Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Inside the 'chilling' clinic treating the biggest outbreak of Ebola ever recorded

Mon 7 Jul 2014

Inside the 'chilling' clinic treating the biggest outbreak of Ebola ever recorded

Thumb_dan_rivers
Our first glimpse of the Medecins Sans Frontieres clinic in Conakry is chilling.
Doctors in yellow and white bio-hazard suits move slowly around a temporary complex of tents and outbuildings like extras in a science fiction film.
Only their eyes are visible behind clear plastic eye guards. Extreme vigilance is needed when dealing with one of the worst most virulent diseases.
And we're here to report on the biggest outbreak of Ebola ever recorded, that's now spread to Guinea's sprawling capital Conakry, a city of two million people.
Extreme vigilance has been required to deal with the deadly outbreak. Credit: ITV News
As you walk into the clinic in the grounds of the main hospital, you can’t get past the security guards without washing your hands and the soles of your shoes in a bleach solution. No-one goes in or out without it.
Inside, there's another level of security altogether: a preparation tent where doctors and nurses gear up to enter the high risk zone.
Carefully they put on Wellington boots, a plastic all-in-one suit, a rubber apron, a plastic hood, plastic goggles and 2 pairs of rubber gloves - no part of the face or body is exposed - because just one drop of bodily fluid from an infected patient could pass on the virus.
People entering the clinic have to wash their hands and soles of their shoes in a bleach solution before entering. Credit: ITV News
This Ebola outbreak in West Africa began here in Guinea in March. It soon spread to neighbouring Sierra Leone and on to Liberia and is now confirmed as the worst outbreak ever.
More than 750 cases have been reported and more than 445 deaths.
The symptoms can be horrific, they begin with fever and diarrhoea - but victims can bleed externally and internally.
Shoes are seen in the clinic. Credit: ITV News
When the doctors enter the high-risk zone, they only spend about an hour within it. The plastic suits are too hot for anything more and in the month of Ramadan when many aren’t eating all day long - the risk of overheating themselves is high. One doctor recorded a temperature in the suit of 46 degrees centigrade.
Doctors are only allowed to spend an hour within the high-risk zone. Credit: ITV News
We watch Monia Sayah, a French Nurse with MSF working quickly inside, then, when her time is up, she comes through an exit tent, where she is sprayed with chlorine.
She washes her hands in chlorine in between removing each separate part of her security suit. No risks are taken. Only the goggles and the apron are not incinerated, instead they are plunged into chlorine to kill any trace of the deadly virus. She finally steps out, soaked in bleach and sweat. She tells me how harrowing it can be inside.
A nurse describes the 'harrowing' scenes she has witnessed. Credit: ITV News
The patients with Ebola are totally isolated, so she does what she can to comfort them. She touches them through the plastic to give them some human contact, even though they can’t see her face.
This clinic has seen Ebola victims of all ages. Even a seven-month-old baby. He didn't have the strength to fight the deadly disease.
The clinic has seen victims of all ages. Credit: ITV News
One of the patients is a woman called Mbalya. She is a traditional healer and caught the virus treating others. She is old and frail, but is fighting it.
We talk for a while across at a distance of two metres, separated by a flimsy plastic fence. The virus is not airborne but it's disconcerting that the doctors in the other side of the fence are fully suited and I am not.
Dan Rivers has travelled to report on the biggest ever outbreak of Ebola ever recorded. Credit: ITV News
Mbalya then insists on giving a message to others urging anyone with the symptoms to get medical help immediately.
Initially Ebola patients can appear to have Malaria. Victims suffer a fever, headaches and muscle aches. But after a few days the virus can result in haemorrhaging from their eyes, ears and genitals. By then it's often too late to save them.
This is a virus that wastes no time. Symptoms can be sudden and deterioration can be fast. The chances of survival are far greater if help is sought immediately. If not then the chance of dying can be 90%.
But the clinic in Conakry is prepared for that. On one side - are the patients. On the other is the morgue. http://www.itv.com/news/2014-07-07/inside-the-chilling-clinic-treating-the-biggest-outbreak-of-ebola-ever-recorded/

US citizen suspected to carry #Ebola in Ghana died

  1. US citizen suspected to carry in died. Blood was send in USA to be tested. Sources say the first test was wrong.
  2. Health authorities promise further test in the as initial test may have been inconclusive.

Dr. Jill Biden Arrives in Sierra Leone



Dr. Jill Biden Arrives in Sierra Leone


WASHINGTON, July 8, 2014/African Press Organization (APO)/ — Dr. Jill Biden has arrived in Freetown, Sierra Leone, her final stop on a three-country visit to Africa.


In Sierra Leone, Dr. Biden will highlight how her trip to Africa has focused on the importance of girls’ education and women’s participation in government, the economy, and civil society in accelerating economic development, improving health and educational outcomes, strengthening democratic governance, and fostering peace and security.


On Sunday, Dr. Biden will attend a reception hosted by Second Lady Khadija Sam Sumana as part of Sierra Leone’s recognition of the significance of this visit.


On Monday, Dr. Biden will meet with President Ernest Bai Koroma at the State House to discuss women’s empowerment; Sierra Leone’s participation in the Equal Futures Partnership and its efforts to promote women’s political and economic empowerment; the country’s work to crack down on corruption; and a range of other issues facing Sierra Leone today. Upon arrival at the State House, Dr. Biden will observe a female quarter guard ceremony and then walk with President Koroma to the Cotton Tree, a historic national landmark and enduring image of Freetown.


Later, Dr. Biden will visit St. Joseph’s Secondary School where she will deliver remarks on the empowerment of women and girls through education and highlight important moments from her three-country tour of Africa.


Afterwards, Dr. Biden will travel to the U.S. Embassy to meet with staff and families. While at the Embassy, she will meet with human trafficking survivors to discuss how local organizations and government officials are working to prevent trafficking and provide assistance to survivors.


Dr. Biden will then depart Sierra Leone en route Washington, DC.


SOURCE

US Department of State
http://appablog.wordpress.com/2014/07/08/dr-jill-biden-arrives-in-sierra-leone/

Ebola: Sierra Leoneans asked to forgo handshakes

By KEMO CHAM in Freetown | Monday, July 7  2014 at  10:18

A picture taken on June 28, 2014 shows a member of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) putting on protective gear at the isolation ward of the Donka Hospital in Conakry, where people infected with the Ebola virus are being treated. PHOTO | FILE 
Sierra Leone Information and Communication Minister Alhaji Alpha Kanu has asked citizens to give handshakes a none-month break in light of the Ebola epidemic.
He compared the Ebola epidemic to the country’s 11-year civil war and said radical behavioural change was necessary to contain it.
"This is like the rebel war. The only difference is you don't see the enemy. This is an invincible enemy," Mr Kanu said.
"It is not rude not to extend your hand. Let us leave it for a while. The Chinese and Japanese don't do it," he offered.
The Ebola outbreak which began in Guinea is also pre-occupying the authorities in Liberia. The disease is transmitted through contact with infected people and through bodily fluids.
As of Saturday, the death in Sierra Leone had gone up to 73, with a total of 254 laboratory cases confirmed.
Amidst the worsening of the situation and warnings by the World Health Organization (WHO) of worse to come, West African governments appear in dilemma as to best approach.
The government’s increasingly radical approach has been raising some eyebrows.
Both Liberia and Sierra Leone have criminalised sheltering of patients who refuse to seek medical treatment.
Proper hygiene
Last week, a 55-year-old Sierra Leonean in the eastern Kenema District became the first victim of the new law.
He was convicted of a "disorderly manner" for obstructing a medical official, the daily Awoko newspaper reported.
He was sentenced for one month in jail with an option of a fine.
Action Aid’s country director called the criminalisation approach heavy-handed and urged more sensitisation instead.
The government is however opposed to calls for closure of borders.
Sierra Leoneans hold the neighbouring countries, particularly Guinea, responsible for letting the virus cross into their territory.
The government believes closure of the borders will be an exercise in futility.
Mr Kanu said all the cases which have come into the country came in through unofficial crossing points and closure will only force people to take to these illegal routes.
The only way out, he insisted, was practising proper hygiene.
The government has resisted calls to declare the outbreak a national emergency, which would force it to divert resources from other pressing matters to the anti-Ebola effort. http://www.africareview.com/News/Sierra-Leoneans-asked-to-forgo-handshakes/-/979180/2374722/-/g8ux8tz/-/index.html

Ebola: 307 deaths in Guinea dated 7 July

Say that there has to be a resurgence of Ebola virus in Guinea, is outside of science fiction. To believe, the latest figures supplied by the health authorities, aided by their partners WHO and MSF, to date, epidemic has killed 307 people, reflecting an evolution of the count macabre due to this disease.

Hence the urgency of a concerted strategy between Guinea and other countries in the West African sub-region. At the meeting in Accra crisis recently, scholars have said that the countries of the region need to mobilize immediate € 10 million to combat the spread of the epidemic.
As of July 7, 2014, therefore, according to the latest health bulletin of the Guinean Ministry of Health and Public Health, in collaboration with WHO and MSF, Guinea has recorded 408 cases of Ebola haemorrhagic fever, for 307 deaths.
These cases are distributed as follows:
294 confirmed cases and 195 deaths case;
Probable cases: 96 cases and 96;
Suspected cases: 18 cases and 16 deaths.
It should be noted at the same time, it has been recorded cured in 84 treatment centers.
Aboubakri http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mosaiqueguinee.com%2Findex.php%2Factu%2Fpolitique%2F2068-ebola-307-deces-en-guinee-a-la-date-du-07-juillet

Suspected Ebola Virus case at Nyaho Clinic tests 'tentatively negative'

Source: Ghana|Myjoyonline.com
Date: 08-07-2014 Time: 06:07:26:am
A suspected case of Ebola disease detected at the Nyaho Medical Centre in Accra on Sunday has tested "tentatively negative", according to the Ghana Health Service.
Head of Disease Surveillance at the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Badu Sarkodie, told Joy News more work would be done Tuesday before a substantive conclusion would be announced.
"What it means is that whatever they [scientists who tested blood samples of the suspect victims] have done is not complete and there is the need for follow up tests", said Dr Badu Sarkodie.
Four staff members of Nyaho Medical Centre have since been quarantined after they came into contact with an American citizen suspected to be carrying the deadly virus.
Blood samples of the suspected victim were subsequently taken for test at the Nugouchi Memorial Institute of Medical Research, which has given its preliminary report as negative.
Following the suspected case at the Nyaho clinic, the University of Ghana Medical Centre cautioned the general public  against eating and getting close to animals found dead in rain forests as they may carry the Ebola virus....  http://www.myjoyonline.com/news/2014/July-8th/suspected-ebola-virus-case-at-nyaho-clinic-tests-tentatively-negative.php

Monday, July 7, 2014

Cape Mount Records First Suspected Ebola Case

hattip Pathfinder

By D. Ignatius Roberts, LINA Grand Cape Mount County Correspondent

ROBERTSPORT, July 6 (LINA) - The first suspected case of the deadly Ebola disease has been recorded at the St. Timothy Government Hospital in Robertsport, Grand Cape Mount County.
...
Dr. Keita said following the submission of the testing result, it will be established whether the patient is an Ebola patient or not.

He said the patient is still undergoing treatment at the hospital.

Meanwhile, Grand Cape Mount County Assistant Superintendent for Development, Tenneh Simpson Kpedebah, is calling on the Ministry of Health to provide protective materials for health workers to prevent them from contracting the Ebola virus.
...
http://www.liberianewsagency.org/pagesnews.php?nid=1748

Sierra Leone News: Bo people should not be doubtful about Ebola-BDC Chair

The Bo District Chairman, has appealed to the people of Bo not to have any doubts whatsoever about the existence and reality of the Ebola virus in the country.
Joseph Munda Rogers made his remarks in his capacity as chairman of an awareness-raising march pass on Thursday, 3rd July organized by the eleven Members of Parliament representing the district.
He said most of what he hears from members of public relating to the Ebola virus, are indicative of the “wrong perceptions” many people have about the virus in Bo and the entire country. He called on the people to appreciate whatever they are told about the Ebola virus, while he stressed the deadliness of the virus on its victims.
“Don’t be Doubting Thomases on Ebola. The disease is in Sierra Leone and it is becoming “a plaque”,” he stressed in the Mende lingua franca.
He therefore applauded the awareness-raising move by the team of Parliamentarians representing constituencies in the Bo district as “a proof of the existence of the virus” and a move to raise the awareness level of the people in order to guide and guard against infection.

The march pass which attracted students and youth organizations passed through major thoroughfares in Bo city. The marchers displayed banners and placards with inscriptions highlighting the existence of Ebola and guiding against infection. The marchers who had assembled at three meeting points in Bo later converged at the Coronation Field where speeches were made.
Member of Parliament for Constituency 67 in the Bo City, Hon. Swaliho Koroma in his brief speech told the people that he and his colleagues believe that Ebola is real and that it is in the country. He expressed delight that so far, the “evil hands of the virus” have not been stretched to the districts. He called for general precautions to avoid contraction of the virus.

He said those with wrong perceptions about the virus could cause more harm than good to the general population if they continue propagating their doubtful thoughts about the existence of the virus. “Such skepticism could be dangerous for the health and safeguard of many people in the future,” Hon. Koroma maintained.
He said they are in the district as a team to confirm the existence of the virus in the country and to educate the people on how to prevent contracting the virus.

Representing Constituency 075, Hon. Kuyembeh stated that Ebola since its entry into the country has killed more people in their region and prayed that it does not any toll on Bo district.
The Bo District Medical Officer, Dr. Alhaji Salieu Turay gave a lengthy appraisal of the virus and how it attacks its victims. He informed the eager crowd however that despite the fatal state of the virus, “it can be cured”, but emphasized that this can only be achieved when the sickness is detected earlier. The sickness he explained to the people has stages 1, 2 and 3.
He informed that it is only in Kenema that a well-equipped laboratory exists to diagnose and analyze the Ebola virus. He cautioned the people to avoid those things that can cause contraction of the virus and encouraged them to report symptoms earlier to the hospital.
By Jenkins Bawoh
Monday July 07, 2014 http://awoko.org/2014/07/07/sierra-leone-news-bo-people-should-not-be-doubtful-about-ebola-bdc-chair/

U.S. citizen in Ghana tests negative for Ebola

ACCRA Mon Jul 7, 2014 6:15pm EDT

(Reuters) - A U.S. citizen suspected of having Ebola because he fell ill after visiting West African states battling the disease has tested negative, a senior Ministry of Health official told Reuters on Monday.
The man, who has not being named, is in quarantine at Nyaho clinic in Accra and the blood tests were conducted at Noguchi Memorial Institute of Medical Research in the city.
"It is negative," Badu Sarkodie, head of disease surveillance at the Ghana Health Service, told Reuters, adding that further tests would be conducted.
Health officials have called for regional action to halt the world's deadliest outbreak of the disease, which has spread across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, killing at least 467 people since February.
The highly contagious Ebola virus causes fever, vomiting, bleeding and diarrhoea and kills up to 90 percent of those it infects. It is transmitted through contact with blood or other fluids.
A previous suspected Ebola case in Ghana also tested negative in April. link.reuters.com/fyj32w
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/07/us-health-ebola-ghana-idUSKBN0FC0ZF20140707

Reported Case of Ebola Not Confirmed Yet - MoH

Jul 07, 2014 at 3:13pm
The Ministry of Health has denied that there is an Ebola case at a private clinic in Accra.

In a statement, the P.R. O of the Ministry, Tony Goodman said, the suspected fever case recorded at the facility has not been confirmed as Ebola.

According to him, the sample has been sent to the Noguchi Memorial Research Centre for examination and the result is expected to be out by close of today.

In the meantime, Mr. Goodman said, precautionary measures have been taken to ensure that it does not spread if it turns out to be true http://www.gbcghana.com/1.1775592

Nyaho fever case not yet proven to be Ebola – Health Ministry

 Monday, 7 July 2014

The Ministry of Health says the Noguchi Memorial Research Centre has not confirmed the suspected fever case recorded at the Nyaho Clinic yet.

It says it has put in place every precautionary measure at that clinic, including additional support of Public Health staff from the Ministry, “to quarantine patient and clinical staff [and] supply of protective gowns for staff of that hospital.”

The Ministry says it has also directed that the case should remain at that clinic and re-treated until otherwise, while “we wait for the laboratory result from the Noguchi Memorial Research Centre.”

A statement signed by the Ministry’s Public Relations Officer, Tony Goodman said: “We expect the general public to remain calm as we wait for the result from the blood sample taken for test.”

“We will like to assure the general public that we have everything under control,” it added. http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=315868

Ebola outbreak: Ghana tests US man


A US citizen is being tested for the Ebola virus in Ghana, which has had no confirmed cases of the virus in the current West African outbreak.
The man has been quarantined at the private Nyaho Clinic in the capital, Accra, health officials say.
The virus has so far killed more than 460 people since it broke out in Guinea in February and spread to neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone.
It is the world's deadliest outbreak to date and there is no cure for Ebola.
The US embassy in Accra said it had been informed that a US citizen was being tested but would not give any more details, Reuters news agency reports.
'Under control' The man was believed to have visited Guinea and Sierra Leone in recent weeks.
Ghana's health ministry said it had put in place "precautionary measures" and people should stay calm.
Staff at the clinic had also been quarantined and provided with protective clothing, it added in a statement. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-28192398

The Ministry of Health -Suspected Ebola case in Ghana

Suspected Ebola case in Ghana
The Ministry of Health wishes to inform the general public that the suspected fever case recorded at the Nyaho Clinic has not been confirmed yet by Noguchi Memorial Research Centre.

Meanwhile the Ministry has put in place every precautionary measures at that clinic include additional support of Public Health staff from the Ministry, directive to quarantine patient and clinical staff, supply of protective gowns for staff of that hospital

The Ministry has also directed that the case remain at that clinic and retreated until otherwise whilst we wait for the laboratory result from the Noguchi Memorial Research Centre.

We expect the general public to remain calm as we wait for the result from the blood sample taken for test

We will like to assure the general public that we have everything under control.
Signed:
Tony Goodman
Public Relations Officer
Ministry of Health

 http://www.citifmonline.com/2014/07/06/ebola-alert-nugochi-yet-to-confirm-nyaho-fever-case-moh/

Marc Poncin, MSF Emergency Coordinator Ebola: "We are unable to work"

Mon, July 7th 2014, 4:59  
Marc Poncin, Coordinator activities   Médecins Sans Frontières against the Ebola epidemic in Guinea, said Saturday that prevents them from working in Conakry and in several localities of the country.
 

He said that it is especially Gueckedou, the epicenter of the epidemic, that people are hostile to health workers, including those of Doctors Without Borders. "20 villages Gueckedou deny access to health actors" said Marc Poncin. "But that is not all. This is a part of the population," he said.
Coordinator for the hostility to health actors means that there are people who are not yet convinced of the existence of the disease.
Given the situation, Marc Poncin reassured that the institution will not give in to discouragement. Rather, it will continue the sensitization to convince the skeptics. In this work, Doctors Without Borders calls for the support of the Guinean authorities to access populations. "We discussed it with the authority to have access to people,"   said Marc Poncin which listed some four areas of the country where the health players are not welcome among some citizens.    Among these cities, the capital Conakry, Boffa and Gueckedou.
Medical personnel wipe hostility as they are among the first victims of the disease. Twenty of them died trying to save lives.
  The epidemic now totals 194 deaths of 292 confirmed cases, according to the latest statistics provided by the National Committee for response.   However, treatment centers have successfully cured 98 patients.

Suspected Ebola case reported in Accra

Monday, 7 July 2014
An American (name withheld) has been quarantined at the Nyaho clinic in Accra for a suspected Ebola case.

Citi News sources at the Health Ministry say the American who reported at the hospital with fever had previously visited Guinea and Sierra Leone...
 The Health Ministry in a statement said “the suspected fever case recorded at the Nyaho Clinic has not been confirmed yet by Noguchi Memorial Research Centre”.

It further stated that: “the Ministry has put in place every precautionary measure at that clinic, including additional support of Public Health staff from the Ministry, directive to quarantine patient and clinical staff, supply of protective gowns for the staff of that hospital”.

It urged the general public to remain calm as it awaits the resu.. http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=315764

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Nyaho Clinic Records Ghana’s First Ebola Case?

Via 233 Live News: Nyaho Clinic Records Ghana’s First Ebola Case? Excerpt:
Unconfirmed reports reaching 233livenews indicates that, Nyaho Clinic, a private hospital in Accra has recorded Ghana’s first case of the deadly Ebola virus. 
It is reported that a patient (rumored to be from Guinea) is said to have died of the disease at the hospital. All staff and medical officers who attended to the victim have since been quarantined. 
A source at hospital revealed that the case has been reported to the Noguchi Institute for tests to confirm the virus strain since the hospital cannot independently confirm the victim died of ebola virus. http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2014/07/an-ebola-case-in-ghana.html


Nyaho Clinic Records Ghana’s First Ebola Case?


Nyaho ClinicUnconfirmed reports reaching 233livenews indicates that, Nyaho Clinic, a private hospital in Accra has recorded Ghana’s first case of the deadly Ebola virus.
It is reported that a patient (rumored to be from Guinea) is said to have died of the disease at the hospital. All staff and medical officers who attended to the victim have since been quarantined.

A source at hospital revealed that the case has been reported to the Noguchi Institute for tests to confirm the virus strain since the hospital cannot independently confirm the victim died of ebola virus.
The unnamed capricious ebola virus strain has since February 2014 spread throughout Guinea and beyond the nation’s borders in West Africa. At least 779 infections and over 500 deaths have so far been reported.
Sierra Leone, Mali and Ghana identified suspected cases by mid-April, but all clinical samples of suspected cases tested negative for the ebola virus. http://233livenews.wordpress.com/2014/07/06/nyaho-clinic-records-ghanas-first-ebola-case/

British Ebola outbreak: Doctors order to look out for deadly symptoms as killer virus hits UK

Every GP in the country has been ordered to look out for symptoms of the killer ebola virus in a scramble to stop the world’s deadliest outbreak taking hold in Britain.
Doctors have been sent new guidelines on how to deal with suspected cases of the virus, which kills nine out ten people it infects and is now sweeping through west Africa.
British health officials have been dispatched to the affected areas in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, while Britain’s port authorities have also been put on alert.
Although health officials say the risk is slight, they are concerned about people returning here after visiting their families in west Africa and Sierra Leone in particular. They are also worried about an influx of visitors from the region this month for the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.
Prof David Haymann, head of global health security at the think-tank Chatham House, said: ‘The virus appears to be stable but there’s a huge family of fever viruses and there’s always a chance of a mutation.’
The virus was first detected in 1976 when it killed 280 people in the Congo. It causes death through multiple organ failure and internal bleeding and there is still no cure or vaccine.
It is spread through contact with bodily fluids but there is some evidence it can be transmitted through water droplets in the air.
The death toll from the latest outbreak is said to be 467 although experts fear this is a gross underestimate.
Prof Dilys Morgan, from Public Health England, said: ‘Because the incubation period is up to 21 days there’s a slight risk that cases may turn up in the UK but that risk is very low.’ http://metro.co.uk/2014/07/06/british-ebola-outbreak-doctors-order-to-look-out-for-deadly-symptoms-as-killer-virus-hits-uk-4789186/

Suspected Ebola case in Ghana


akwasi sarpong

@akwasisarpong Journalist at BBC World Service. My tweets=my views.

Accra, London, Africa, World


Followed by FAO Newsroom.




  1. akwasi sarpong@akwasisarpong 52m
    For latest on suspected #ebola virus investigation in #Gha by Ministry of Health ff @BBCAfrica's @Sammy_Darko in Accra. Results tomorrow
    Details
  2. akwasi sarpong@akwasisarpong 1h
    Public asked to be calm as "we wait for the result from the blood sample taken for test". "...we have everything under control." Signed:PRO
 Suspected patient returned from guinea.
": Statement suspected fever case recorded at Nyaho Clinic not confirmed yet by Noguchi Centre."

 
ebola: incident happened in a private hospital mostly patronized by the rich..
ebola: patient returned from Guinea two weeks ago, identified as an American

   ·  1h
's health ministry says it has put "precautionary"measures at Nyaho clinic including support of Public Health staff from the Ministry

's health ministry says it has put "precautionary"measures at Nyaho clinic including support of Public Health staff from the Ministry  

Nana Boakye-Yiadom

@boakyecitifm

African Story Challenge Winner| Radio France International Correspondent |AFP| Dep. Dir. News Programming,Citi FM| Business News| nanaboakye4@yahoo.co.uk

Ebola in Guinea: the latest statistics of the epidemic ...


CONAKRY-Doctors Without Borders (MSF) released the latest statistics from the state of Ebola hemorrhagic proud in Guinea. According to this organization, to the date of July 3, 2014, Guinea has recorded 292 confirmed cases of Ebola including 194 deaths and 98 healed, learned Africaguinee.com.
As of July 3, 2014, the number of hospitalized cases in different treatment centers are:
Gueckédou: 6 confirmed cases including 4 Gueckédou and 2 from Sierra Leone.
Conakry: 3 confirmed including 2 from Boffa. The date of the last confirmed case dates back to June 26 in Conakry and 29 June Gueckédou.
According to MSF's what makes a total of seven confirmed cases in treatment centers.
Five (5) previously affected prefectures (Télémélé, Kissidougou Dabola Dinguiraye and Kouroussa) have not notified new cases this week. 
According to Marc Poncin National Emergency Coordinator for Ebola doctor without borders, Gueckédou is the area where the epidemic is still more severe.
'' There has been an upsurge of cases, while in May, we saw that the epidemic was decreasing. So, the quote on the epidemic remains serious Gueckédou perspective. Unfortunately we are facing particular difficulties, access to all areas where the epidemic has he said.
The Minister of Health and Public Hygiene, Rémy Lamah, then handed local authorities to facilitate open access to all areas and villages affected by the epidemic. http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.africaguinee.com%2Farticles%2F2014%2F07%2F06%2Febola-en-guinee-les-dernieres-statistiques-de-l-epidemie%23.U7murysr8tM.twitter

Fighting Ebola At ELWA: ‘Greatest Danger To Our Hospital Staff’


HOW YOU CAN HELP: Consider partnering with ELWA by making a donation to the ELWA Hospital Ebola Response Fund

The first rumors of Ebola in Liberia began to seep into conversation in the middle of March. Before the month closed, there were cases being reported from Lofa, and papers all over the capital city carried headlines with “Ebola” in the title. As the situation grew more serious, ELWA Hospital prepared an isolation unit and prayed it would not be needed.

At first it seemed that the prayers had been answered. The outbreak experienced a short lull, and for a time there were no new confirmed cases in Liberia. But on June 11th, ELWA Hospital received their first suspected case of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), an indication of a resurgence that has lasted weeks and shows signs of continuing for much longer.


“We have an obligation to take care of these patients, in order to maximize their chances for survival and relieve their suffering. There is a need for a place to put them in order to protect their families and the community at large from contracting the disease.”
Dr. Debbie Eisenhut, SIM surgeon in charge of EVD response for ELWA
Jake Buller, Photos by Bethany Fankhauser

Since May 29, at least 33 new cases of EVD have been confirmed, 12 of which were in Montserrado, either in or near the capital city of Monrovia. Five of these cases have been treated at ELWA Hospital in ELWA’s isolation unit. The ward currently has two patients, and both have been confirmed as having EVD.

Right now there are three doctors working with the EVD patients, along with nurses and aides. In addition, these doctors and nurses have support from the outside through their decontamination team. This team gets supplies, helps the doctors and nurses dress in their protective gear, and decontaminates them when they come out as well as mixing the bleach that is used in the process.

Dr. Debbie Eisenhut, a SIM surgeon in charge of the EVD response for ELWA, shares that the workers at the hospital “have an obligation to take care of these patients, in order to maximize their chances for survival and relieve their suffering. There is a need for a place to put them in order to protect their families and the community at large from contracting the disease.”

“The greatest danger to our hospital staff,” she continues, “is the possibility of missing a case of Ebola that comes to our ER. The symptoms of Ebola are very non-specific—fever, gastrointestinal symptoms, headache, fatigue, etc. So great vigilance is needed to realize that a patient might be a suspected case so that he/she can be isolated and not admitted to the regular ward. This takes careful screening and many questions about the history and contacts. We have a protocol in place to minimize the probability of inadvertent admission of an Ebola patient to our regular wards. We also have a security protocol in place in front of the ER to reduce traffic and to help screen patients appropriately. All of this takes vigilance and attention to detail in order to keep our hospital staff safe.”

The current isolation unit is small, a converted chapel. But ELWA, with the technical and financial assistance of Samaritan’s Purse, is converting a building of the new hospital into a larger isolation unit with improved care facilities. God willing, it should open sometime next week.

Here are some ways you can pray for Liberia, and ELWA Hospital in particular:
Pray for protection for all of the hospital staff members. Pray that no cases of EVD will be missed in the ER and be inadvertently admitted to the regular wards.

Pray for healing for the patients who have been admitted.

Pray for rest and stamina for those working double duty—doctors, nurses and the workers helping outside the unit. For the missionaries, their regular jobs haven’t stopped. They continue to keep up their regular work even while staffing the Ebola unit.

Praise for all the help—supplies and personnel—that Samaritan’s Purse is providing.

Pray that Liberia will become more aware of the situation. Pray that Liberians will understand what causes EVD and take the proper precautions to prevent its spread.

Minister, Ambassador, others call for prayers against Ebola

By M.B. Jalloh, Press Attaché, Saudi Arabia
Senior Government officials currently in Islam’s holiest city of Mecca have called on Sierra Leone’s Muslim population to take advantage of the holy month of Ramadan, to offer prayers and sacrifices for divine mercy to stop the spread of the Ebola virus in the West African nation.
In a joint appeal to the Muslim Community after Friday, 4th July, 2014 congregational prayers at the Grand Mosque of Mecca (Al-Masjid al-Ḥaram), Sierra Leone’s Minister of Social Welfare who also doubles as Chairman of the 2014 Sierra Leone Hajj Affairs, Hon. Alhaji Moijue Kaikai, Sierra Leone’s Ambassador in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, H.E Alhaji M.S. Kargbo and Special Assistant to H.E The President on Political and Religious Affairs, Hon. Nuru Deen Sankoh –Yillah asked Muslims to multiply their prayers, offer sacrifices and read the Holy Qur’an during this blessed month of Ramadan for the elimination of the deadly virus in their country.. http://www.salonemonitor.net/minister-ambassador-others-call-for-prayers-against-ebola/

INSPECTOR GENERAL SANCTIONS POLICE EFFORTS TO FIGHT EBOLA VIRUS IN SIERRA LEONE

Inspector General of Police, Francis Munu has sanctioned the Sierra Leone Police as an integral part of the effort to fight the Ebola Virus. His statements came in support of the affirmation given to the Police by His Excellency the President in his address to the nation on Tuesday 1st July 2014. In his address, His Excellency recognized the role of the Police as an integral part of the fight against the spread of the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone.
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He mentioned specifically that while tracing suspected cases and taking them to observation and treatment centres are integral to the fight against the disease, the main way to stop the spread of the virus is by preventing contact with persons with the virus. In the event, the Police force together with health personnel is expected to be at the fore front of combating this scourge in Sierra Leone. President Koroma went on to stress that he had instructed the police to “ensure that all vehicles and their passengers entering and leaving Kailahun and Kenema Districts subject themselves to screening.”

In supporting Government’s efforts to combat the disease, IG Munu has instructed that adequate and appropriate information be released to all rank and file police officers and more specifically for chlorine to be made available at all frontline stations and police posts in the affected areas. He also stressed the need for vigilance within the force and for personnel who are apprised of any suspect situation or casualty to report such cases immediately to local health experts and not to touch or attempt to move such fatalities without proper protective apparel. He noted that this directive is necessary because it has been declared that the virus is at its most vicious stage within a dead body.

Senior members of the Sierra Leone Police also rendered their support to the IGP in a meeting of the police Executive Board Meeting held to discuss the outbreak and the police strategic response. AIG Kalia Sesay, Director of Peacekeeping indicated that the matter of containment should be given a priority and that the Sierra Leone Police must use their best endeavors to support health officials in containing the disease and help in tracing and surrendering of suspected cases for treatment.

Inspector General Munu informed his senior staff that their mandate is now guided by the President’s call for national action and that all stakeholders should not relent in this fight against the deadly disease. He noted particularly that His Excellency has buttressed police powers to uphold the law, specifically in relation to the provisions of the Public Health Order Act of 1960. This law states that anyone who obstructs or interferes with the performance of the medical team in relation to an outbreak such as Ebola is guilty of an offence and liable to punishment.

IG Munu also reiterated the police duty to protect life and their mandate to uphold the law by drawing senior staff attention to the President’s ban on all Lumas or trade fairs until the virus has been effectively contained. This task, he told his senior staff is to be disseminated to all local police units across the country. The police, he added are central to this battle against Ebola and he encouraged all rank and file of the sierra Leone police to adhere to medical and public health guidelines at all times

Inspector General Munu also confirmed that the Sierra Leone Police is sending one police support unit to Kenema to increase the number of police necessary to operationalize the President’s directives. The Sierra Leone Police will also deploy two additional police vehicles to Daru and Kailahun to support medical staff and to deal with any incidence of public disorder that may occur. These measures the Inspector General of Police added are in addition to putting together an operational plan for any ensuing public disorder. 
Finally, the IG confirmed that in complementing government’s efforts across the country, the police is carrying out its own internal sensitization on how to handle the disease and prevent police personnel from getting infected by the virus. http://standardtimespress.org/?p=5251

Sierra Leone News: Ebola wahala…Man jailed for obstruction of Ebola staff

A-55 year old businessman, Sani Mohamed of Mano Junction in Nongowa Chiefdom in Kenema District was on Wednesday, 2nd July 2014 convicted for behaving in a “disorderly manner” thereby obstructing the work of a medical personnel working on Ebola.
The accused man was sentenced to one month imprisonment or pay a fine of Le 10, 000 (one hundred and fifty thousand Leones) at his first and last appearance before presiding Magistrate, Alhaji S. Koroma in the Kenema Magistrate Court
According to the particulars of offence, the accused on Wednesday 25th June, 2014 at Mano Junction checkpoint did behave in a disorderly manner there by obstructing the work of a medical personnel working on Ebola.
He was arrested for his misbehaviour and charged to court on two counts charges to wit: behaving disorderly contrary to Section 12 of the Public Order Act No.46 of 1965 as amended by Section 15 of Act No. 2 of 1973, count two for obstruction contrary to Section 39 (1) of Police Act No. 7 of 1964. He was found guilty of the offence and he pleaded for mercy. The matter was prosecuted by Assistant Superintendent of Police, Sahr Didi Lahai of the Legal and Justice Support Department of the Kenema Police Division.
By Saffa Moriba
Friday July 04, 2014 http://awoko.org/2014/07/04/sierra-leone-news-ebola-wahalaman-jailed-for-obstruction-of-ebola-staff/

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Kenya Health officials on high alert over Ebola


Saturday, July 5, 2014


In Summary

  • Kenya Airways has regular weekly flights to and from West African countries, which are currently at the epicentre of the deadly outbreak.
  • About 759 people have been infected with the virus in Guinea, Liberia and Sierre Leone and 467 of them have since died.
By MIKE MWANIKI
Public health officials and nurses at the Eldoret, Kisumu, Moi and Jomo Kenyatta international airports are on high alert following the outbreak of the deadly Ebola that has so far killed 467 people in West Africa.
Ministry of Health Directorate of Preventive and Promotive Diseases Head William Maina on Saturday said the airport health officials were carrying out random sampling of passengers who were arriving from Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to guard against what has become the world’s deadliest disease outbreak.
They are asking the travellers some questions and checking if they had any fever. At the same time, we have acquired the necessary protective gear as a precaution,” Dr Maina said in a telephone interview.
Currently, Kenya Airways has regular weekly flights to and from West African countries, which are currently at the epicentre of the deadly outbreak.
At the same time, Dr Maina announced that a joint response team comprising of officials from the World Health Organisation, Centre for Disease Control, Kenya Medical Research Institute and Ministry of Health was on stand-by.
The team is led by an Epidemiologist in the Ministry of Health’s disease control unit, Dr Ian Njeru.
On Friday, health ministers from 11 West African countries adopted a common strategy to fight the deadly disease.
At an emergency meeting in Ghana, the ministers promised to better collaboration to fight what has become the world’s deadliest outbreak, killing people in a short time.
About 759 people have been infected with the virus in Guinea, Liberia and Sierre Leone and 467 of them have since died.