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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

I have never seen this number of bodies before': Life at an Ebola clinic in Liberia

I have never seen this number of bodies before': Life at an Ebola clinic in Liberia

Scale of Ebola outbreak in Western Africa leaves staff of frontline health agency with grim decisions over who to treat and who to turn away

MSF staff prepare to carry a woman into the Ebola clinic in Monrovia, Liberia
MSF staff prepare to carry a woman into the Ebola clinic in Monrovia, Liberia Photo: Will Wintercross/The Telegraph
Like every other volunteer who serves with Médecins Sans Frontières, Stefan Liljegren joined up to help the sick and destitute. In 15 years with the agency, he has been everywhere from Afghanistan and Kosovo through to South Sudan and East Timor, the hard and often dangerous work compensated for by the knowledge that he is saving lives.
His latest mission, in Ebola-hit Liberia, offers rather less job satisfaction. As field co-ordinator of MSF's new 160-bed Ebola treatment centre in the capital, Monrovia, one of his tasks is to decide which of the sick people who arrive outside the clinic's gates should get treatment. Such is the scale of the outbreak that for every 20-30 new patients the clinic admits each day, the same number are often turned away - despite the likelihood that they will go home and infect their relatives.

MSF staff carry a dead body into the Ebola clinic in Monrovia, Liberia, to be cremated (Will Wintercross/The Telegraph)
"This is by far the most difficult challenge that I have ever faced," the 44-year-old Swede told The Telegraph during a brief break from his work in the sweltering humidity of Liberia's monsoon season. "Every day I have been faced with impossible choices, and decisions that are inhuman to make. Having to tell someone that they can't come in when they are screaming and begging to do so is an indescribable feeling, especially when you know they may go back to families who might well then get sick themselves."
Outside the clinic an hour earlier, a grisly scene demonstrated Mr Liljegren's point. Resting face down in the mud was the body of Dauda Konneh, 42. He had been lying there dead since daybreak.
"He was vomiting a lot and had symptoms like Ebola, so we put him in a pick-up truck and took him here for treatment," said one young man outside. "When we got here last night, he was still alive, but the clinic would not accept him. He died at dawn today."
When The Telegraph mentions this to Mr Liljegren, he nods. Having dead or dying patients outside the clinic overnight is "a regular occurrence," he says. The reason being that once night falls, the hospital does not admit anyone: handling Ebola patients requires extreme care at the best of times, and it would be dangerous to do so in the dark.
The task of removing Mr Konneh's body falls to Stephen Rowden, a British MSF volunteer from Danbury, Essex, who leads a team in charge of the safe removal of corpses, which are sprayed with chlorine-based disinfectant first. "When I started it was maybe a body every two days, now it is daily and sometimes up to five a day," said Mr Rowden, 55. "I have never seen this amount of bodies before. It sounds callous, but you just have to switch off emotionally."
No amount of "switching off", though, spares the MSF staff from the wider scale of the fatalities around them. The clinic, one of three now operating in Monrovia, has seen 350 deaths in the last month alone. Since all infected bodies have to be burned, the casualties have exceeded the ability of Monrovia's local crematorium to cope. MSF has had to import an incinerator from Europe - normally used for livestock - to assist. For an aid agency that prides itself on triumphing in even the most difficult operating circumstances, it is a depressing reminder of how far there is to go.

Goggles are hung up in an Ebola linic in Monrovia (Will Wintercross/The Telegraph)
The challenges facing the MSF clinic are in turn a snapshot of the wider outbreak now engulfing West Africa. On Tuesday, a World Health Organisation study warned that the number of Ebola cases - currently topping 5,000 - could reach hundreds of thousands by January unless the aid operation was drastically increased.
Nowhere is the problem more acute than in Liberia, where 40 per cent of all the deaths have taken place, and where the government health service - already badly damaged by the 1989-2003 civil war - has been paralysed by Ebola infections among its own staff. In coming weeks, a 3,000-strong US military mission will arrive in Monrovia to build 17 more Ebola treatment clinics. But MSF, which worked in Liberia throughout the civil war, says the situation is already spiraling out of control.
Inside the MSF clinic in Monrovia, those patients fortunate enough to get through the gates are admitted to rows of large white treatment tents. The clinic is designed so that only staff clad in the yellow high protective gear can enter the "high risk" wards, where those with advanced stages of the virus are treated.
In the nurses' area, meanwhile, a pair of paperwork folders hung next to the door describe the patients' only possible outcomes. One has a set of forms marked "Discharge", given to the few who manage to fight the virus off. The other has a set of forms marked "Death Certificate". Right now, the latter is used between 70 and 80 per cent of the time.
In another section, patients who have tested positive but are not yet acutely ill congregate in an open air living room, where they can chat to each other, do exercises, and play board games.
One patient, Foofee Sheriff, 54, tells how he became infected after attending the funeral of his brother, who died recently. "We did not touch my brother's body during the burial, we used plastic bags on our hands to make sure that didn't happen," he insists. "But eight days after I started feeling sick."
Mr Sheriff's claim not to know how he became infected is typical. It may be that he genuinely does not know. Or it may be that he failed to take adequate precautions at his brother's funeral but does not wish to admit it.
Either way, it makes it all the harder for the medical staff to establish patients' so-called "contract traces", which, in an ideal world, identify exactly who else might have been infected. This would also be useful in the case of Mr Konneh, who, according to the man who brought him in, worked for Irish aid agency Concern, which itself has been conducting a public health campaign about how to avoid getting Ebola.
Alerted by The Telegraph the following day, Concern confirmed that Mr Konneh, a father-of-two, did indeed work for them, although they believe he may have died from an existing medical condition which took a turn for the worse in the past ten days. Such is Ebola's grip on Liberia, however, that right now, any sudden illness is feared to be the virus - hence Mr Konneh's attempt to reach the clinic. The young man adds that Mr Konneh moved between two different households while sick, and that the occupants of both houses are "now very worried".
As too is Mr Liljegren, for whom there is simply no telling how many more desperate people may soon be pleading outside his clinic's gates. "It gets worse by the day," he says. "How much worse it will it get? I have no idea." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/ebola/11118025/I-have-never-seen-this-number-of-bodies-before-Life-at-an-Ebola-clinic-in-Liberia.html

Heads up, Indiana

ELCL Assistant Bishop Off To U.S.

The Assistant Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Liberia (ELCL) Rev. Samuel S.Y. Navoh,I on Monday September 22nd left the Country to attend a four day international SCMS Disaster Response committee conference in Indiana, United State of America.
Bishop Navoh was invited by the SCMS International Disaster Response Committee in the United State to represent the ELCL church in Liberia.
During his deliberation at the conference, the ELCL assistant Bishop Navoh said he will reemphasize on the present Ebola Disaster in Liberia which a according to him is a very serious crisis in country.
More besides, Bishop Navoh Said he will also expressed gratitude on “behalf of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Liberia to the SCMS International Disaster response committee for their continuous support to the church in Liberia since the Liberia civil crisis up to the present Ebola crisis in the country.
Bishop Navoh however disclosed that while in the United States he will lobby with other international organizations for more support to the Church in Liberia.
He have meanwhile called on member Churches of the ELCL to uphold “the faith of the church and they should also continue to pray for the Nation for the Eradication of the Ebola virus from the land.

Liberia-#Ebola kills five police officers

Deputy Police Director for Administration, William K. Mulbah, has told a US medical team visiting Liberia that the deadly Ebola virus has killed five officers of the Liberia National Police, LNP. A police barrack on Camp Johnson Road, Monrovia was early this quarantined after an affiliate of one of the officers there was allegedly infected and subsequently spread the disease in the barrack.
Dozens of officers in the barrack were being observed after it was discovered that a nurse, who had been visiting there died of Ebola. Meanwhile, Mr. Mulbah said the LNP is grateful for the numerous support it continues to get from the Americans, directed towards rebuilding the capacity of the police, saying, with such knowledge the LNP was prepared to fight against Ebola.

The police announced yesterday that a team from the Louisiana State University arrived in Liberia to conduct a three-day intensive anti-Ebola seminar for over five hundred officers. Mr. Mulbah had cautioned officers attending the training to take it seriously. Officers from the patrol, Police Support Unit and the Emergency Response Unit are partaking in the training.

The seminar, which is ongoing at the National Police Headquarters on Capitol Hill, is made possible through the US State Department to train first respondents of the police to the Ebola crisis, a statement said on Monday. The LNP says the US team is headed by Jason Krause, Director of Operations at the National Center or Biomedical Research and Training based in the State of Louisiana, America.

Liberia-WHO seeks blood donations #ebola survivors included

The World Health Organization’s Case Management Consultant to Liberia, Ugandan Doctor Atai Omorutu says a Blood Bank is ready to receive blood from donors, including “strong” Ebola survivals, as well as those not tested positive of the virus.
Speaking at the Ministry of Information during a news conference aired live on state radio ELBC on Tuesday, September 23, Dr. Omorutu said the Island Clinic was a new Eblola Treatment Unit that still needed a lot of support. “We need people to come; we need the survivals to come and help us with blood donation, especially. We also need anyone else who can do it to give us blood,” she said.
She noted that Ebola consumes the substances that help “the body” system to repair itself, thereby causing patients to bleed after the pothholes in their blood vessels had been deepened.
“So, when we get fresh blood, these protein substances are in fresh blood from anybody. So when we give this fresh blood to the patients, we give them the repair- the road materials for repairing their blood vessels. And therefore, they do not bleed,” said Doctor Omorutu.

As such, she said, her appeal is that anybody who’s willing to give blood should come forth, saying “the blood bank is ready to receive any blood donor.” Directing the public to the blood transfusion service on 24th Street, Sinkor, she made specific request to Ebola survivals that are strong, because she said, they have the antibodies, otherwise called “the soldiers” that have fought and defeated the Ebola virus.
The WHO consultant indicated that that if individual blood donors are unable to donate the full unit of 450 mills, “we would be happy to take whatever amount.”
In the same vein, Dr. Omorutu has disclosed that the newly opened Ebola Treatment Center at the Island Clinic on Bushrod Island is now turning patients away after exhausting its 150 bed capacities.
Since Sunday, September 21, she said, Island Clinic has had a transfer of more than 100 confirmed Ebola patients from Redemption Hospital. By 8am on Monday, September 22, she said: “we had a total of 119 cases,” but noted that seven of them had unfortunately died from 3pm on Sunday to 8am on Monday.
She, additionally, noted that from 8am on Monday to 8am on Tuesday, the Clinic had 74 new admissions, arriving at a total of 186 cases from the time the clinic was opened on Sunday.
Up to Tuesday, Madam   Omorutu said the clinic had a total of 20 deaths in the two days, and that two of the deceased from Nimba County had died in the ambulance, while others died shortly after being transferred to Island Clinic. Announcing a total of 173 patients were now admitted at Island Clinic, she said “unfortunately” they have to turn away some patients because there was no more space.
Notwithstanding, Madam Omorutu concluded that the Government of Liberia has got more support to built Ebola Treatment Units, but said it will take at least three or four weeks before another Unit can be ready in addition to what is available.

Dead Ebola patients resurrect?

Two Ebola patients, who died of the virus in separate communities in Nimba County have reportedly resurrected in the county. The victims, both females, believed to be in their 60s and 40s respectively, died of the Ebola virus recently in Hope Village Community and the Catholic Community in Ganta, Nimba.
But to the amazement of residents and onlookers on Monday, the deceased reportedly regained life in total disbelief.  The NewDawn Nimba County correspondent said the late Dorris Quoi of Hope Village Community and the second victim only identified as Ma Kebeh, said to be in her late 60s, were about to be taken for burial when they resurrected.
Ma Kebeh had reportedly been in door for two nights without food and medication before her alleged death. Nimba County has had bazaar news of Ebola cases with a native doctor from the county, who claimed that he could cure infected victims, dying of the virus himself last week.
News of the resurrection of the two victims has reportedly created panic in residents of Hope Village Community and Ganta at large, with some citizens describing Dorris Quoi as a ghost, who shouldn’t live among them. Since the Ebola outbreak in Nimba County, this is the first incident of dead victims resurrecting.

Ghana-My staff are not ready to risk their lives for Ebola - NADMO boss


Kofi Portuphy
The National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) has indicated it will not be able to manage any possible outbreak of the Ebola virus in Ghana.
Staff expect to be equipped with the appropriate protective gears to enable them identify and isolate cases of the dreaded disease.
Their request is also to safeguard their lives from being infected, should there be an outbreak in the country... http://www.globalnewsreel.com/health/my-staff-are-not-ready-to-risk-their-lives-for-ebola-nadmo-boss

 

 
 
Beware when you are buying a roasted maize from this maize seller. http://trivia.peacefmonline.com/pages/triviaphotos/201409/216252.php

Ebola epidemic: house-to-house search in Sierra Leone reveals 358 new cases

Ebola epidemic: house-to-house search in Sierra Leone reveals 358 new cases

Teams of volunteers also find hundreds of unburied corpses, according to leaked email from senior American diplomat 
Wednesday 24 September 2014
Door-to-door searches during a three-day curfew in Sierra Leone identified more than 350 suspected new cases of Ebola, according by the top US diplomat in the country.
Charge d’affairs Kathleen Fitzgibbon said teams of volunteers had also discovered 265 corpses, of which 216 have since been been buried, in an email to organisers of the curfew that has been seen by the Guardian.
Fitzgibbon said the home visits had identified a preliminary 358 new suspected cases, with 85 patients sent to treatment centres.
Although there had been some “challenges” during the curfew, which saw the normally chaotic streets of the capital Freetown replaced by eerie silence after the government ordered everyone to stay in doors, it could be seen as the “beginning of the end” of the Ebola epidemic, which has killed more than 2,800 people, primarily in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
The challenges included the late arrival of some materials, a rumor that the soap was infected with Ebola. Some people fled to the bush to avoid the house-to-house [checks] but came back for the last day,” she said, adding that there had also been a “slow response to pick up corpses”.
American public health institute the Centers for Disease Control has been heavily involved in the emergency response in Sierra Leone and is running the laboratory in Kenema, Sierra Leone’s third biggest city.
“Our team decided the three-day stay-at-home was a ‘watershed moment’ whose momentum must be turned into specific activities to ensure that we can reach our goal of isolating 70% of positive cases to reverse the upward trend of the epidemic,” Fitzgibbon said.
“The public needs to understand that this campaign did not end Ebola but can be the beginning of the end if everyone remains vigilant,” she added.
The email said one of the priorities was to ensure all bodies were buried correctly as funerals have been identified as one of the ways the disease has spread, with relatives touching the bodies of the deceased.
She said she was “extremely saddened” to hear of two incidents of the disease spreading recently, one in the area of Moyamba in which 24 people had died “as a result of participating in this funeral” and another in Kenema, in which 17 infections were traced to a funeral.
Fitzgibbon described one man in Kenema government hospital as a “hero”. He survived the disease and stayed in the hospital helping other patients, “in particular a young child whose parents are dead”, because he knew he was immune to contracting the virus again.
“We need to celebrate this man’s contribution ... survivors should not be stigmatised, but instead celebrated,” she said.
In Makeni, a large town three hours from Freetown, an Irish nun helping at a holding centre said 138 suspected cases had been identified with 19 bodies buried and 39 patients send five hours away for treatment.
“The good thing is we have had some survivors. One man and four women came back and they addressed the emergency people. It seemed to give them back the energy, because they are all exhausted,” said Sr Mary Sweeney.
Near-empty streets during a three-day curfew in Freetown.
Near-empty streets during a three-day curfew in Freetown. Photograph: Michael Duff/AP

Full email

From Charge d’Affaires Kathleen FitzGibbon
September 23, 2014
The House-to-House campaign met its objectives, thanks to public participation. Preliminary information indicates that the teams were able to reach between75% to 85% of the 1.7 million households throughout the country. Here are some of the lessons learned. Interpersonal communication is the most effective way to deliver messages. Most misconceptions were dispelled by the teams. Neighborhood watches will continue helping communities connect with service providers. It will be important to sustain the holding and treatment facilities as those who were ill self-reported or were identified by neighbors. The public needs to understand that this campaign did not end Ebola but can be the beginning of the end if everyone remains vigilant.
Sierra Leoneans voluntarily went to holding or treatment centers. A preliminary number is that 358 suspected cases were transferred to holding centers for testing, with 85 transferred to treatment centers. There were 285 bodies found during the exercise and 216 of those have been buried. Corpses are swabbed and tested to determine cause of death. We still await the official data as the districts are still reporting results so these numbers are not final. Public acceptance of the campaign was high. It is important to get all cases of Ebola into care centers.
The challenges included late arrival of some materials, a rumor that the soap was infected with Ebola, some people fled to the bush to avoid the House-to-House but came back for the last day, and improved but still slow response to pick up corpses. Another constraint was that some of the holding centers were opened late. For sure, small businesses and poor residents faced more challenges than most, but independent monitors report that many of them stated that campaign was important enough to participate.

Today, our CDC team shared with President Koroma what our team has been doing and will continue to do in support of the response. In Dr. Frieden’s words, we are with Sierra Leone through the entire epidemic. Our team described this three-day stay-at-home as a “watershed moment” whose momentum must be turned into specific activities to ensure that we can reach our goal of isolating 70% of positive cases to reverse the upward trend of the epidemic. 
CDC is running the laboratory at Kenema, assisting the Ministry of Health and Sanitation with data management, supporting the Emergency Operations Center at the national and local levels, and will be doing more to strengthen the district health teams. This is where the fight will be won. The data is important to allow us to target where the new infections are coming from. CDC also recommends that all bodies are buried in a medically safe manner. This is what we are aiming for and you can be assured that all the donors are working closely with the government to support the burial teams. We are supporting the International Federation of the Red Cross to train and manage burial teams in several districts. We also are funding treatment centers.
I was extremely saddened to here of two recent instances, one in Moyamba and a second in Kailahun, where prominent persons died and the communities conducted burials. In Moyamba, 24 persons are dead as a result of participating in this funeral and there may be others. In Kailahun, the same scenario, with some 17 deaths traced to this funeral. Please, save yourselves and your community, let the Ministry of Health and Sanitation conduct all burials. We know that these teams are overwhelmed, but be persistent in insisting that corpses are handled only by trained personnel.
Let’s end on a high note and talk about a hero. There is a man in the Kenema Government Hospital treatment center who has recovering from Ebola. He is now immune. He stayed in the treatment center helping with other patients, in particular, a young child whose parents are dead. He could have left, but he chose instead to remain and help this child, who is unrelated to him. We need to celebrate this man’s contribution to the fight against Ebola. Survivors should not be stigmatized, but instead celebrated and enabled to be an important component of the response. Bravo
 http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/24/ebola-sierra-leone-curfew?CMP=twt_gu

Red Cross team attacked in Guinea

Red Cross team attacked in Guinea September 24, 2014 15:33 GMT CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -- A Red Cross team has been attacked in the West African country of Guinea -- in the latest in a string of assaults that are hindering efforts to control the outbreak of Ebola. The team had been collecting bodies believed to be infected with the disease. They were attacked by family members of the dead. One of the volunteers is recovering from a neck wound. Last week, a team of several health officials and journalists in Guinea was abducted and killed. They had been educating people on how to avoid contracting Ebola. Ebola is believed to have infected more than 5,800 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Nigeria and Senegal. The outbreak has grown into the world's largest ever for the disease, partially because it went undetected for months. Efforts to control the disease have been hampered by resistance -- ranging from outright denials that Ebola exists to fears that the very people sent to combat it are in fact carriers. %@AP Links APPHOTO ALIB104: People protest against the governments lack of help to the public with the Ebola virus in their communities, outside the Liberian House of Representative in Monrovia, Liberia, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014. U.S. health officials Tuesday presented worst-case and best-case scenarios for the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, calculating that as many as 1.4 million people could be sickened in two countries alone by mid-January -- or the outbreak could be winding down by then, if control efforts substantially increase. (AP Photo/Abbas Dulleh) (23 Sep 2014)

Read More at: http://www.fox17.com/template/inews_wire/wires.international/360dd56e-www.fox17.com.shtml
 September 24, 2014 15:33 GMT
 CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -- A Red Cross team has been attacked in the West African country of Guinea -- in the latest in a string of assaults that are hindering efforts to control the outbreak of Ebola. The team had been collecting bodies believed to be infected with the disease. They were attacked by family members of the dead. One of the volunteers is recovering from a neck wound. Last week, a team of several health officials and journalists in Guinea was abducted and killed. They had been educating people on how to avoid contracting Ebola. Ebola is believed to have infected more than 5,800 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Nigeria and Senegal. The outbreak has grown into the world's largest ever for the disease, partially because it went undetected for months. Efforts to control the disease have been hampered by resistance -- ranging from outright denials that Ebola exists to fears that the very people sent to combat it are in fact carriers.  U.S. health officials Tuesday presented worst-case and best-case scenarios for the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, calculating that as many as 1.4 million people could be sickened in two countries alone by mid-January -- or the outbreak could be winding down by then, if control efforts substantially increase. (AP Photo/Abbas Dulleh) (23 Sep 2014)  Read More at: http://www.fox17.com/template/inews_wire/wires.international/360dd56e-www.fox17.com.shtml
Red Cross team attacked in Guinea September 24, 2014 15:33 GMT CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -- A Red Cross team has been attacked in the West African country of Guinea -- in the latest in a string of assaults that are hindering efforts to control the outbreak of Ebola. The team had been collecting bodies believed to be infected with the disease. They were attacked by family members of the dead. One of the volunteers is recovering from a neck wound. Last week, a team of several health officials and journalists in Guinea was abducted and killed. They had been educating people on how to avoid contracting Ebola. Ebola is believed to have infected more than 5,800 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Nigeria and Senegal. The outbreak has grown into the world's largest ever for the disease, partially because it went undetected for months. Efforts to control the disease have been hampered by resistance -- ranging from outright denials that Ebola exists to fears that the very people sent to combat it are in fact carriers. %@AP Links APPHOTO ALIB104: People protest against the governments lack of help to the public with the Ebola virus in their communities, outside the Liberian House of Representative in Monrovia, Liberia, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014. U.S. health officials Tuesday presented worst-case and best-case scenarios for the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, calculating that as many as 1.4 million people could be sickened in two countries alone by mid-January -- or the outbreak could be winding down by then, if control efforts substantially increase. (AP Photo/Abbas Dulleh) (23 Sep 2014)

Read More at: http://www.fox17.com/template/inews_wire/wires.international/360dd56e-www.fox17.com.shtml

Ebola virus in humans may be here to stay; fatality rate is 71%

Ebola virus in humans may be here to stay; fatality rate is 71%

...In order to stop the epidemic, researchers say the rate of transmission would have to be cut in half. This would be equivalent to vaccinating 50% of the population.
Several experimental vaccines are under development, and -- if they prove to be effective -- won't be available in large quantities for months.
Study authors made the following observations on the effects of the outbreak.
  • The average age of a person infected with Ebola is 32, and 49.9% of patients are male, researchers said. The age group that has been most affected by the virus makes up 44% of the total population.
  • The most common symptoms reported by patients included fever (87.1%), fatigue (76.4%), loss of appetite (64.5%), vomiting (67.6%), diarrhea (65.6%), headache (53.4%), and abdominal pain (44.3%).
  • Although the disease is infamously known for causing bleeding, "specific hemorrhagic symptoms were rarely reported (in less than 1% to 5.7% of patients)," authors wrote. "Unexplained bleeding" however was reported in 18% of cases.
  • People age 45 or older faced a significantly greater threat of death, as did those who suffered a number of the following symptoms: diarrhea, conjunctivitis, difficulty breathing or swallowing, confusion or disorientation and coma, unexplained bleeding, bleeding gums, bloody nose, bleeding at injection sites and bleeding from the vagina. http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-ebola-may-be-endemic-in-people-20140922-story.html
"The risk of continued epidemic expansion and the prospect of endemic EVD in West Africa call for the most forceful implementation of present control measures and the rapid development and deployment of new drugs and vaccines," the authors concluded.

Doctor's Report : Youngster With Ebola Symptoms Admitted In Rajiv Gandhi Hospital - Thanthi TV

Published on Sep 23, 2014
Doctor's Report : Youngster With Ebola Symptoms Admitted In Rajiv Gandhi Hospital...
A Youngster from Ariyalur was detected with Ebola Virus when he came from Nigeria This Morning.. He was admitted and given Special Treatment in Rajiv Gandhi General Hospital, Chennai- Thanthi TV

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aen9Tu9ua9s&feature=youtube_gdata

This picture shows the problem of the spread man in yellow escaping with relative - Ebola victim on a bike

This picture shows the problem of the spread man in yellow escaping with relative - Ebola victim on a bike..

Dozens monitored for Ebola in Zimbabwe

Dozens monitored for Ebola in Zimbabwe

JOHANNESBURG – The number of Ebola infections in Liberia and Sierra Leone could skyrocket to 1.4 million by January 2015, according to a new projection by US health authorities out Tuesday.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that Ebola cases in these two West African nations could range from between 550,000 and 1.4 million cases by January 20, 2015.
The estimate is based on the assumption that Ebola cases in the world's largest outbreak to date are being underreported by a factor of 2.5, said the report from the CDC.
However, experts cautioned that the projection was based on data available in August, before the United States ramped up its response to the epidemic in West Africa. 
Meanwhile, at least 98 people have been monitored in Harare after having travelled to Ebola-hit West African countries over the past few weeks.
That’s according to Zimbabwe’s NewsDay publication.
It says that of the 98 people, 84 were coming from Nigeria.
Half had already been cleared after testing negative following a 21-day surveillance period under which the disease is expected to manifest.
Harare City Council health director Prosper Chonzi told NewsDay:
“If one is coming from West Africa, they are screened first at the ports of entry and if they do not have any signs and symptoms, we do not put them under quarantine, but we put them under surveillance for 21 days,” Chonzi said. 
“Port health officials assess the people and then those who have been to the affected countries fill in forms which are then sent to us, so that we follow them up.
We check on them every day and tell them to go about their business, but ask them not to move around unnecessarily so that in the event they are affected, it will be easy to trace them.
Chonzi said after expiry of the 21-day gestation period for the Ebola virus, the monitored patients would be certified as free of the disease, NewsDay reported.
“For one to be put under quarantine, they would have one or two signs and symptoms associated with Ebola and if their history shows that they have been in contact with an Ebola patient, then we refer them to Wilkins Hospital (an infectious disease hospital in Harare) where the procedure will go on,” Chonzi said.

Ebola scare hits Dominase; 1 dead, 2 hospital staff quarantined


Ebola scare hits Dominase; 1 dead, 2 hospital staff quarantined

An Ebola scare at the Dominase SDA Hospital in the Ashanti Regional has created panic in the area.
A man believed to be in his late twenties died in the hospital with the symptoms of Ebola Tuesday.
He was left unattended to by frightened hospital staff who did not have basic protective equipment with which to handle the patient.
According to the Medical Superintendent of the hospital, Prince Kwakye Afriyie, the deceased reported to the hospital three days ago with fever.
He was treated and discharged.
But the Pusiga native returned to the hospital, this time with blood oozing out of his orifices, Dr Afriyie said.
Frightened hospital, suspecting the victim to be suffering from the deadly Ebola which has killed over 2000 across West Africa, called the District health authorities for Personal Protective Equipment.
There was none there.
More soon.http://www.modernghana.com/news/570792/1/ebola-scare-hits-dominase-1-dead-2-hospital-staff-.html

 

Suspected Ebola Man Dies At Kintampo


By Daily Guide


Medical team dressed in Ebola apparel conveying the body
Medical team dressed in Ebola apparel conveying the body
Fear and panic has gripped residents of Kintampo in the Brong-Ahafo Region following the bizarre death of a young man suspected to have been infected with the deadly Ebola virus.
The man, who was on board a Kumasi-Bolga bound mini bus with registration number GT 9982 E, allegedly complained of some ailment and started having running stomach and vomiting blood when the vehicle got to Kintampo Sunday morning. He died some few minutes later.
Eyewitnesses told  DAILY GUIDE  that the development created panic among both the passengers and the residents around the lorry park where he passed on, as medical personnel, dressed in their full Ebola apparel, stormed the scene to convey the body to prevent people from contacting it.
The Disease Officer of the Kintampo Municipality, Kofi Adams, confirmed the death of the man to this paper when contacted on telephone. He said the body had since been buried, whilst the blood sample had been taken to the Noguchi Medical Research Centre in Accra for testing.
Mr Adams therefore appealed to residents of the area and the general public not to be scared by the incident since it was not anything serious as earlier speculated, whiles waiting for the full result to ascertain the actual cause of death.
He disclosed to  DAILY GUIDE  that the deceased was among a group of students from the Upper East Region who went to the Wassa area in the Western Region to embark on galamsey (illegal mining) activities during the holidays to earn some money to pay their fees. And, on their way back to the region, the deceased suddenly fell sick and died.
According to Mr Adams, the cause of death could be mercury poison. Mr Adams indicated that a similar incident happened recently at the Goaso area where a Galamseyer died vomiting blood as a result of mercury poison.  http://www.modernghana.com/news/570653/1/suspected-ebola-man-dies-at-kintampo.html

New effort to fight Ebola in Liberia would move infected patients out of their homes




September 22 
Looking for a new approach to blunt the Ebola epidemic sweeping West Africa, the Liberian government, the World Health Organization and their nonprofit partners here are launching an ambitious but controversial program to move infected people out of their homes and into ad hoc centers that will provide rudimentary care, officials said Monday.
The effort, which is expected to begin in the next few weeks, is an intermediate step, officials said. The goal is to reduce the chances that Ebola patients will infect their own families and others while ensuring that they receive basic care — such as food, water and pain medicine — at a time when many hospitals and treatment centers are closed.
The initiative also is a tacit acknowledgment that it could be weeks, even months, before new treatment facilities promised by the United States and others are operational. Continued reliance on home-based care doesn’t do much good, officials said, in taming a devastating epidemic in a country where large groups of people live in crowded, urban settings.
The proposed community care centers, as they are dubbed by officials, would have between 15 to 30 beds. Ultimately, as many 70 centers could be set up across Liberia, if the strategy proves successful. Such a program has never been tried on such a large scale.
A similar effort is being discussed for Sierra Leone.
The 10 Ebola treatment centers in West Africa are based on a design of three wards, which help separate patients suspected of having the disease from patients with a certain diagnosis. Ebola care units would have two wards (one each for both suspected and confirmed cases), with a few beds per ward and a triage zone.
The total number of cases of Ebola in West Africa is doubling every three weeks, with each person with the virus infecting as many as two other people, health officials say. That high rate of transmission is making it impossible to contain the worst Ebola outbreak on record.
The new treatment beds promised by Washington and others “are not coming fast enough,” Peter Graaf, the WHO’s country representative in Liberia said Monday. “We have to get to the point where every Ebola patient infects less than one [other person]. You have to get out of your house.”
The community care centers are supposed to complement the recently announced U.S. military effort to build facilities for 1,700 Ebola patients across Liberia, as well as ongoing efforts by other groups to provide several hundred beds. There are now slightly more than 380 beds in Monrovia, which has a population of 1.5 million people.
One of the main organizations involved in fighting the outbreak, Doctors Without Borders, is dubious about the new effort and has decided not to take part. Brice de le Vigne, the group’s director of operations, warned that the proposed community care centers could worsen the situation.
“This is not going to work,” he said. “To move people in an epidemic is a big responsibility, and it requires huge logistical capabilities” that the affected countries simply don’t have.
To be effective, he said, these care centers need to have strict infection control, adequate supplies, trained staff, regular supervision, the ability to diagnose and refer patients, and proper burial methods. Otherwise, they could turn into “contamination centers,” he said.
De le Vigne said the top priority should be deploying more trained staff to run the higher-level treatment centers in hospitals and clinics.
Nearly 6,000 people in West Africa have been infected with the virus, and 2,833 have died, the WHO says. Liberia, the hardest-hit nation, has had more than 3,000 infections and 1,578 deaths, according to the latest WHO data.
But this laboratory-confirmed case count is well below the actual number of people infected, according to the WHO and global health experts. Doctors Without Borders, for example, has said that number represents only 20 percent of the current caseload, meaning the true number of cases could be in the tens of thousands.
“I think the message is that this outbreak isn’t going to turn around until we get people out of their homes and into safe places,” said Frank Mahoney, who is leading the team from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention here.
No one would be relocated to the community care centers against his or her will. A draft report by the WHO stresses the need to work cooperatively with communities that want to isolate individuals who are infected or suspected of being infected. The project is aimed at people who are showing symptoms of the disease but are not in the later stages of the illness. Patients would get food, water, sanitation, analgesics and other necessities.
The care centers would be located in former health clinics or other medical facilities, many of which have closed, according to the WHO’s Graaf.
In contrast to the basic-care community centers, the medical facilities that provide special Ebola treatment — including the ones the United States and others will be setting up — provide a higher level of care and a better-trained staff.
Because many people with Ebola are being cared for at home, efforts are underway to distribute as much chlorine and as many rubber gloves, buckets and other hygiene items as possible. But officials say such steps don’t go far enough.
In a few locations here, residents already have started a version of the community-care program on their own, moving infected people into, for example, a shuttered school and attempting to feed and care for them without becoming infected themselves.
As envisioned, the new plan would be a somewhat more sophisticated alternative to that, including testing to determine whether a person has Ebola, anti-malarial drugs, infection control and body removal and cremation or burial. Each person moved into the center would be accompanied by a family member or friend charged with taking care of him or her; that relative would be supplied with protective gowns and gloves and taught their proper use.
Graaf said setting up the facilities, supervising them and getting the word out will be labor-intensive. He declined to say how much the plan would cost, saying those figures have not been finalized.
De le Vigne of Doctors Without Borders said the hardest-hit countries don’t have the infrastructure to put in place the logistics, discipline and clear chain of command needed for the community centers to work properly, especially when patients become sicker and need the higher level of medical care available at treatment centers.
“Once you start to vomit blood or have bloody diarrhea, you need to have properly trained medical staff and sanitation to be able to handle these super-infected cases,” he said...  http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/new-effort-to-fight-ebola-in-liberia-would-move-infected-patients-out-of-their-homes/2014/09/22/f869dc08-4281-11e4-b47c-f5889e061e5f_story.html

Liberians Explain Why the Ebola Crisis Is Way Worse Than You Think

Liberians Explain Why the Ebola Crisis Is Way Worse Than You Think

What life is like at the epicenter of the outbreak.

| Wed Sep. 24, 2014 11:52 AM EDT


Health workers in Liberia haul away the body of a person suspected of dying of Ebola
As of this week, the Ebola outbreak in West Africa is known to have infected more than 5,700 people and taken more than 2,700 lives. Yet those figures could be dwarfed in the coming months if the virus is left unchecked. On Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the total number of infections could reach 1.4 million in Liberia and Sierra Leone by January 2015. Though cases have been reported in five countries, nowhere has been harder hit than Liberia, where more than half of the Ebola-related deaths have occurred.
More MoJo coverage of the Ebola crisis.

The outbreak has crippled Liberia's economy. Its neighbors have sealed their borders and shipping has all but ceased, causing food and gas prices to skyrocket. Schools and businesses have closed down, and the country's already meager health care system has been taxed to the breaking point. Meanwhile, as panic grips the country, crime has risen steadily and some reports suggest that Liberia's security forces are among the perpetrators. To get a picture of how dire the situation is on the ground, we got in touch with Abel Welwean, a journalist and researcher who lives outside of Monrovia. He conducted a handful of interviews with Liberians in his neighborhood in the second week of September and also provided his own harrowing story of what life is like in the country.
The outbreak has forced many Liberians to stay indoors and avoid interacting with other people. Since the virus can be caught merely by touching the sweat of an infected person, once-common forms of physical contact, like handshakes, have become rarer.
Frances (a university student): Football has been suspended in our country. We are sitting at home just doing nothing—all in the name of protecting ourselves. It is hurting us, but we have to play the safe rules, because we value our own lives.
Abel: I don't wear short sleeve shirts to step outside my house. I keep my children in my yard throughout the day. I make sure we wash our hands periodically. We do not shake hands with anybody outside of our house. We do not entertain visitors in our house… These behaviors are very strange amongst Liberians… Shaking hands is our one of the cultural values that we have. Liberia may be poor and not willing to be developed, but we are friendly people who believe in shaking hands in a special way, and eating together from the same bowl.
Frances: Schools are closed for time indefinite. We don't know when schools will open. We are sitting at home, watching and praying that school will open sooner. Rumors are coming that schools will open next year— we don't know. What I think the youth can do now is to get on our feet and educate the common man, those that are still in the denial stage, to sensitize them, give them the actual information about this Ebola virus, let the youth get on their feet from house to house, door to door, and try to inform the populace about the deadly Ebola virus, and how it can be prevented.
Abel: I worry a lot about the future of our children's education. I was at the verge of paying my children's tuition when the government announced the closure of all schools in the country. For now, I am my children's tutor at home.
"We are urging the international community to come to our rescue, for the downtrodden, because pretty soon there will be another war, and that will be the hunger war."
When the epidemic struck Liberia, a number of hospitals closed, often because their staffs had fled in fear. Adding to the problem, Ebola's symptoms mimic other, still common diseases, but treating anything that resembles Ebola necessitates protective gear that's not always available outside the quarantine centers. That means that many people who are suffering non-Ebola illnesses are going untreated.
Esther (a nurse and midwife): Before, August, September were months we had diarrhea cases in Liberia. But right now, the symptoms of Ebola and malaria are all the same. It's very, very difficult to know an Ebola patient from malaria, so it's very, very difficult to treat any patient in that direction.
Frances: Many were afraid that if you have malaria, you have common cold, you have fever, you go to the hospital, they would diagnose you as an Ebola patient... I even got sick during the outbreak. I was afraid to go to the hospital. I had to do my own medication, but God looked out for me. I'm well. But these were the messages that were going around, that once you have this, they will confine you to a place, they will quarantine you for 21 days, they will inject you. So many Liberians were afraid to go to hospitals. But now the message has spread out. We now know people are surviving of Ebola. Even if it is not Ebola, you just have malaria, you go there, you are treated. They get you tested; they release you on time.
Brooks (an American who was working at the Accountability Lab, an anti-corruption NGO, in Monrovia and has since left the country): Even in July, you heard stories of pregnant women going into labor, bleeding profusely, and not being tended do because people were afraid of Ebola.
Esther: As a midwife, most of the time I have to do deliveries. But right now, as we sit here, this clinic is closed. These are cases that could be treated, but since we don't have the proper equipment, the proper outfits to wear and treat our patients and do tests [for Ebola], we decided to stay away from treating patients, because you don't know who you are touching. Obviously, it's a kind of embarrassment, but we have to go through with it for now.
Before it spread to Monrovia, Ebola struck in Lofa County, Liberia's rice-producing center. Many farmers avoided their fields, severely hurting domestic food production. Food imports (the country imports about two-thirds of its grain supply) have also been hampered because of the crisis. Borders with neighboring countries have been closed, and shipping companies have avoided the nation's ports. All of that has led to the biggest increases in food prices since the nation's civil war, which ended in 2003. In a country where 84 percent of everyone lived on less than $1.25 per day in 2011, this shock has become its own crisis.
Esther: There were times, we were paying, for a 25-kilo [55 pound] bag of rice, we were paying something like 1,150-1,250 [Liberian dollars, or $14 to $15], but right now it's like 1,500 [$18].
John (a Liberian employee of the International Committee of the Red Cross): I see so many people, sometimes they are walking to town [about six miles]. Even if they have money, they prefer walking a distance and saving the money to buy food so they will eat for the day. We tend to be afraid to assist someone from the vehicle, even to tell them the distance they are going, because we don't know who is carrying the virus.
Lawrence (the Liberia country director for Accountability Lab): Hunger is really hitting the country… If the ships are not coming, [farmers] are not making rice, the stockpiles are depleted…the animals are eating the crops, what happens then? The production will decrease, the price will increase, and if you don't have money, what is going to happen? Hunger is going to strike… This is a serious war, without bullets.
It's not just a rise in food prices that Liberians are struggling with; transit costs have increased as well, partly because the government has forbidden commercial vehicles from carrying large numbers of people. Markets have been shut down; NGOs and companies are asking employees to stay at home; schools are closed so teachers are not working. On September 17, the World Bank warned that Ebola could cut Liberia's GDP by 3.4 percentage points, costing $228 million by 2015.
Esther: In my own clinic, I have a staff of twelve. But right now, everybody has to be home until otherwise. Since we don't have protective gear, we don't have anything to work with, we cannot risk our own lives, because if you are not able to protect yourself, you will not able to work with other people. It will be difficult for their families.
Frances: It is better for us to stay at home, but we need, also, to have our daily bread. The international community, international donors, need to come to our rescue, because hunger is taking over Liberia, gradually.
Abel: I have gone out of job because of the Ebola outbreak. Before the outbreak, I had contracts with Princeton, PBS Frontline, Nursing For All, and the Gender Ministry. All of my contracts are on hold until the crisis is over.
The statistics are unreliable, but many report that violent crime is rising since the outbreak began. Even more troubling: some of these crimes have reportedly been at the hands of police and soldiers in uniform. Some Liberian's blame the government's curfew for the problem.
John: Armed robbery is increasing because the government placed this curfew from 9 [p.m.] to 6 AM. Before, there used to be community watch teams. At that time, there was no curfew.
Abel: Our lives were relatively peaceful before the deadly outbreak of the Ebola virus. We could go out any hour and return any hour. There were robberies once in a while, but not compared to the recent ones… I do not know if the proliferation of robberies was political or some criminals just decided to take advantage of the situation.
There have been numerous cases of armed robberies since the curfew was announced… There was one in my community and my neighbors were badly affected. I was really afraid that night when I heard the bullet sound. At that time my family and I were watching movie in the living room. We got scared so much that we couldn't continue the movie. We turned the video off, turned all the lights in the rooms off and went to bed. Fortunately for me, those police officers that came to rescue my neighbors were my friends. They came to my house that night to see how my family and I were doing. [Later, I learned] the robbers wore police uniforms and were fully armed.
Esther: I was a victim about four days ago. I just left my back door open to hang clothes in the front. By the time I was back in, someone had snuck in and took the two phones I had charging. Because the children are not in school, most of the young ones are turning to crime—and not just the young ones, even people who were working and they are not able to work now, some of them are thinking, how do they maintain their families? They are collaborating with some of these criminals to get their way through.
Frances: Liberia is declining, the economy is declining, and things are just getting difficult on a daily basis. We are not free to move around, we are not free in our own country because of this deadly Ebola virus. We are urging the international community to come to our rescue, for the downtrodden, because pretty soon there will be another war, and that will be the hunger war. http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/09/ebola-crisis-liberia-way-worse-you-think

Ebola Cases Could Reach 1.4 Million Within Four Months, C.D.C. Estimates


By DENISE GRADYSEPT. 23, 2014

Yet another set of ominous projections about the Ebola epidemic in West Africa was released Tuesday, in a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that gave worst- and best-case estimates for Liberia and Sierra Leone based on computer modeling.

In the worst-case scenario, the two countries could have a total of 21,000 cases of Ebola by Sept. 30 and 1.4 million cases by Jan. 20 if the disease keeps spreading without effective methods to contain it. These figures take into account the fact that many cases go undetected, and estimate that there are actually 2.5 times as many as reported.

In the best-case model, the epidemic in both countries would be “almost ended” by Jan. 20, the report said. Success would require conducting safe funerals at which no one touches the bodies, and treating 70 percent of patients in settings that reduce the risk of transmission. The report said the proportion of patients now in such settings was about 18 percent in Liberia and 40 percent in Sierra Leone.

The caseload projections are based on data from August, but Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the C.D.C. director, said the situation appeared to have improved since then because more aid had begun to reach the region.

“My gut feeling is, the actions we’re taking now are going to make that worst-case scenario not come to pass,” Dr. Frieden said in a telephone interview. “But it’s important to understand that it could happen.”

Outside experts said the modeling figures were in line with estimates by others in the field.

“It’s a nice job,” said Ira Longini, a professor of biostatistics at the University of Florida who has also done computer modeling of the epidemic. “It summarizes the extent of the problem and what has to happen to deal with it.”

Bryan Lewis, an epidemiologist at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech, agreed that the estimates were reasonable, perhaps even a bit low compared with those generated by other models. He said that if some of the latest data from the World Health Organization is plugged into the C.D.C. model, “the very large numbers of estimated cases are, unfortunately, even larger.”

The current official case count is 5,843, including 2,803 deaths, according to the W.H.O.

The C.D.C. estimates omit Guinea, which has been hit hard, because the epidemic struck in waves that could not be modeled.

The W.H.O. published its own revised estimates of the outbreak on Monday, predicting more than 20,000 cases by Nov. 2 if control does not improve. That figure is more conservative than the one from the C.D.C., but the W.H.O. report also noted that many cases were unreported and said that without effective help, the three most affected countries would soon be reporting thousands of cases and deaths per week. It said its projections were similar to those from the C.D.C.

The W.H.O. report also raised, for the first time, the possibility that the disease would not be stopped but could become endemic in West Africa, meaning that it could become a constant presence there.

President Obama’s promise last week to send 3,000 military personnel to Liberia and to build 17 hospitals there, each with 100 beds, was part of the solution, Dr. Frieden said. But it was not clear when those hospitals would be ready, or who would staff them.

Dr. Frieden said the Defense Department had already delivered parts of a 25-bed unit that would soon be set up to treat health workers who become infected, a safety measure he said was important to help encourage health professionals to volunteer. He said that more aid groups were also arriving in the region to set up treatment centers, and that a “surge” of help would “break the back of the epidemic.”

Monrovia, the Liberian capital, is facing a widespread Ebola epidemic, and as the number of infected grows faster than hospital capacity, some patients wait outside near death.
Dr. Jack Chow, a professor of global health at Carnegie Mellon University and a former W.H.O. official, said, “The surge only becomes realized when those beds are up and operating and the workers are delivering care.”

He added, “If even the medium case comes to pass, with, say, 700,000 cases by January, the epidemic will quickly overwhelm the capabilities that the U.S. plans to send.”

The W.H.O. reported that a new center had just opened in Monrovia, the Liberian capital, with 120 beds for treatment and 30 for triage. Patients were already lined up at the door.

The report from the C.D.C. acknowledged that case counts were rising faster than hospital beds could be provided. It said that in the meantime, different types of treatment would be used, based in homes or community centers, with relatives and others being given protective gear to help prevent the disease from spreading.

The United States government is also sending 400,000 kits containing gloves and disinfectant to Liberia to help families take care of patients at home.

At least one aid group in Liberia is already shifting its focus to teaching people about home care and providing materials to help because there are not enough hospital beds for the sick. Ken Isaacs, a vice president of the group, Samaritan’s Purse, said, “I believe inevitably this is going to move into people’s houses, and the notion of home-based care has to play a more prominent role.”

“Where are they going to go?” he said.


Though providing home-care kits may seem like a pragmatic approach, some public health authorities said they were no substitute for beds in isolation or containment wards.

But Dr. Frieden said that home care had been used to help stamp out smallpox in Africa in the 1960s. The caregivers were often people who had survived smallpox themselves and were immune to it. Some experts have suggested that Ebola survivors might also be employed to care for the sick.

Dr. D. A. Henderson, who led the W.H.O.’s smallpox eradication program, said that local people had been paid to help in the campaign.

“We recruited a lot of people to stand guard at huts with smallpox,” said Dr. Henderson, a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the University of Pittsburgh. “The important thing was to know they got paid.”

He added: “We gave money and food to families who had smallpox so they didn’t have to go out and beg, and they didn’t have to go to the market and potentially infect people. What can you do? If you don’t have food, you’ve got to leave the house and go out. Money can play a useful role.”


Donald G. McNeil Jr. contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/24/healt ... .html?_r=0

Local hospital puts Ebola action plan in place

 Tue 6:48 PM, Sep 23, 2014
By: Laura Warren

News 12 at 6 o' clock/ September 23, 2014
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW) -- The head of the CDC says the Ebola epidemic is spiraling out of control in Africa. Now, the organization is asking US hospitals to prepare in the event of an Ebola outbreak where you live.
Georgia Regents Medical Center is waiting for a shipment of protective goggles, boot covers, and hoods. It's one of the precautions they're taking in case the CDC's fears become reality.
"It's spiraling out of control. It's bad now, it's going to get worse in the very near future," Dr. Thomas Frieden, the CDC director, said.
That's why they're urging hospitals around the country to prepare in case Ebola spreads to our borders.
"Before we actually had our plan in place, we were seeing patients who had spent time in Africa, including West Africa, who had returned with symptoms, just not fever," Dr. Peter Rissing, the Epidemiologist at Georgia Regents Medical Center, said.
So far, there have not been any confirmed cases of Ebola at GRU, but Dr. Rissing says, their team now has a plan in place.
"It was actually put together in conjunction with the same emergency room physicians who had to deal with the first couple of patients without a plan," Dr. Rissing said.
And, after treating Ebola patients in a trial by fire style, the doctors at Emory had a few suggestions.
"Additional insight from folks inside that system would suggest it wasn't all quite as well organized as it might have seemed," Dr. Rissing said.
GRU's plan begins with identifying patients with Ebola symptoms quickly, and getting those patients isolated as soon as possible. It also covers everything from containing blood samples, to training staff how to handle contaminated gear.
GRU is sharing the plan with first responders, like Gold Cross, all to be prepared, no matter what comes our way.
GRU says they've shared their plan with several other area hospitals who have asked for it. Dr. Rissing also says some local doctors have been asked to head to Africa to help fight the outbreak. http://www.wrdw.com/home/headlines/Local-hospital-puts-Ebola-action-plan-in-place-276838511.html

These Maps Show How Ebola Spread In Liberia


| Wed Sep. 24, 2014 6:00 AM EDT
Last Tuesday, the White House announced plans to send 3,000 US troops to the country to coordinate medical care and deliver humanitarian aid. Their command center, and much of their work, will be in Monrovia. But as the maps below show, controlling the disease in and around the sprawling city will not be an easy task. This first map shows the spread of the disease in the capital region as of September 11 (areas colored in darker shades of blue have reported more Ebola infections):
Liberian Ministry of Health and Social Welfare
This second map shows the spread of the disease in the capital region as of September 20—just nine days later. Note the spread of the dark blue:
Liberian Ministry of Health and Social Welfare
When the current outbreak of Ebola first reached Liberia, there were only two known cases of the disease anywhere in the country. Both infections were far from the West African nation's capital, Monrovia. But the virus spread rapidly. In mid-June, health workers discovered the first evidence the disease had spread to the capital: the bodies of seven people, including a nurse and four of her family members.
As of Sunday, 1,232 people are believed to have been infected in Monrovia's Montserrado County— more than a third of Liberia's total cases to date, according to Liberia's health ministry. The disease is believed to have killed 758 people in the county, including 33 health workers. Conditions will almost certainly get worse. On Tuesday, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a report stating that a worst-case scenario for the disease could bring the number of infected in Liberia and Sierra Leone to 1.4 million by January 2015.  http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2014/09/these-maps-show-ebolas-spread-in-around-liberias-capital

DRC: Ebola cured 27 patients

| Last Update September 24, 2014 at 8:32

Minister Kabange Numbi and his delegation visited the General Referral Hospital Wangata Mbandaka to talk with health professionals | Photo: WHO / Eugene Kabambi. Minister Kabange Numbi and his delegation visited the General Referral Hospital Wangata Mbandaka to talk with health professionals | Photo: WHO / Eugene Kabambi.
Twenty-seven people with Ebola virus Djera (Ecuador) are cured, said Tuesday, Sept. 23 medical advisor to the Minister of Health, Dr Roland Shodu Lomani Radio Okapi. "In 68 cases, if you subtract 41, we have 27 cases were treated by us and heal," said he said. Medical adviser to the Minister of Health explained that the problem [the epidemic] is not as strong in the DRC "because the country has the mastery of the situation. The government has put substantial resources to start the response, he said.
Dr. Roland Shodu Lomani also regretted "the lack of interest in the international community about the epidemic [Ebola] raging in the DRC." He still hopes that the international community "will change his mind to return to the Congo" to support the efforts of the government. Dr. Roland Shodu Lomani recognizes, however, that some donors have helped to combat Ebola outbreak.
The Ebola outbreak was declared last August. 68 cases have been recorded since the beginning of the disease, including 41 deaths including 8 health workers. 
 https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http://radiookapi.net/actualite/2014/09/24/rdc-27-malades-debola-gueris/&usg=ALkJrhhFiOjEUJV3qajvWQubWefyhZd57w#more-191560

Ebola: 20,000 cases in November if the situation remains the same

In a study published by the "New England Journal of Medicine", the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on September 23 that over 20,000 people will be infected with Ebola virus in early November if the control measures the epidemic are not reinforced in West Africa.
"Assuming there is no change in measures of controlling the epidemic", there will be 9,939 cases in Liberia, Guinea in 5925 and 5063 in Sierra Leone, experts say the WHO.
"Without a drastic improvement measures", there will be in the coming months, not "hundreds" of cases and deaths each week, but "thousands" they added, noting that the fatality rate of people with virus stands at 70.8%. If nothing is done, Ebola likely to settle in the area for many years and become "endemic", according to experts.
Last week, the UN said 20,000 people rely on infected end of 2014 but the rate of exponential growth of the epidemic has worsened the forecast Scientists Call for More "quick" control measures, especially at funerals and to enhance early detection of cases.


Towards a "catastrophe" if nothing changes
"We are in a third phase of growth of the epidemic" that is "explosive," said Dr. Christopher Dye, one of the co-authors of the study and director of strategy at WHO, during a press conference in Geneva.
"If we do not stop the epidemic quickly, it will not be a disaster but a disaster," he said, adding that if the situation remains the same, Ebola could reach "hundreds of thousands" in the coming months.
He stressed that this epidemic, the worst in the history of this hemorrhagic fever identified in 1976, is "quite similar" to other epidemics have affected other African countries in recent years, such as the DRC and Sudan. "What is different, it is not the characteristics of the virus, but the nature of the affected people," he argued, pointing in particular as a factor in the contamination highly mobile populations.
>> Access our interactive map of 40 years of Ebola outbreaks in Africa by clicking on the video below:
The rapid transmission rate is also due to the slow response to Ebola early in the epidemic that the poor state of the health systems of the three main affected countries, he has acknowledged.
"In Nigeria, where the health system is stronger, the number of cases has been limited to date," said Christl Donnelly, a professor at Imperial College London and co-author of the study.
Dr. Christopher Dye also explained that it was difficult for the moment to take stock of the epidemic, since it appears to be stabilizing in some areas but has appeared in other districts that were spared far.
The experts also noted that the virus does not seem to know of mutation that could facilitate its spread by air, but Christopher Dye said it was "possible that this type of change can happen."  https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jeuneafrique.com%2FArticle%2FJA2802p014.xml0%2Fsante-oms-virus-epidemie-sante-ebola-chronique-d-une-panique.html&edit-text=