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Monday, October 13, 2014

Gov’t mulls bringing home Pinoys in Ebola-hit countries


© Provided by The Philippine Star President Aquino disclosed yesterday that Filipinos in Ebola-hit countries might have to be brought home.
Speaking at the 65th Session of the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Committee for the Western Pacific at the Philippine International Convention Center in Pasay City, Aquino assured the public that the government had imposed stricter measures to keep the country free from the virus.
“Among the questions we need to keep asking ourselves are: How can we best educate our countrymen about these outbreaks, without spreading fear and panic?” he said.
“Is there an efficient and safe way to monitor our countrymen’s exposure to diseases, and to repatriate them, while ensuring their health, as well as that of the general populace?”
Aquino said the Philippines would cooperate with the rest of the world in protecting people from these outbreaks.
“I speak for myself and my government when I say that we will continue to exert every effort and undertake all possible initiatives to find answers to these questions and keep our countrymen safe and healthy as pandemics threaten to spread,” he said.
“However, we can all agree that we work better, and more efficiently, when we work with others, whether to monitor and contain outbreaks, or to meet the Millennium Development Goals, or to anticipate and prepare for global health concerns.”
Aquino said that through WHO’s establishment and   participation in various events, countries were strengthening the ties binding them and affirming their duty to their countrymen and fellowmen.
“For instance, outbreaks of illnesses and diseases like the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome-Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) and Ebola are among the greatest challenges the world faces today,” he said.
“For the Philippines, specifically, the fact that we have 10 million of our countrymen living and working abroad makes these kinds of outbreaks a paramount concern.
“This year, the MERS Coronavirus broke out and spread in the Middle East. Based on current reports, the mortality rate for MERS Coronavirus ranges from 30 to 60 percent; and, of course, our first thought immediately went to the more than a million Filipinos living and working in the Middle East.”
Aquino said the matter was complicated further, when during the Holy Week holiday, authorities received belated news that an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) afflicted with the virus had arrived in the country, and that he had traveled to his home province.
“You can imagine how critical the situation seemed: it was necessary to track down every person on that flight, quarantine and test them at the soonest possible time,” he said. “Thankfully, the test results came back negative. That rather harrowing time gave us the chance to take a good look at our systems, to identify areas that could be improved upon, and to make those improvements. Soon after, I signed an executive order creating an interagency task force to manage emerging infectious diseases in the country; and even now, the work continues.”
The Department of Health (DOH) had been tasked to continue to educate the public about the deadly diseases without causing fear and panic, and to come up with an efficient and safe way to monitor the exposure of people to such diseases, Aquino said.
OFW medical clearance
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the same forum, Health Secretary Enrique Ona said he is proposing to require OFWs to secure medical clearance before returning home.
“For example, we are now making arrangements that the Filipino workers… and they are something like almost 3,000, before they can come home, we will require them to have a so-called medical clearance,” he said.
Ona said a medical clearance would indicate whether a Filipino had been exposed to a person infected with or who died from Ebola.
OFWs would have to give themselves 21 days from the time they planned to board their flight to observe whether they have symptoms of Ebola virus infection, he added.
Ona said this would not be difficult to do except in times of emergency because travel arrangements are  done in advance.
“And if there are no symptoms… he will be given a medical clearance and he can go home,” he said.
“That is our proposal, we are not implementing it yet.” 
OFWs showing symptoms like influenza would be asked to report to a hospital and remain confined for 21 days, he added.
Ona said the government has not yet decided  whether to send health workers to Ebola-hit countries.
“This is a global health care concern… what we are discussing is that we cannot just (send workers),” he said.
“Of course we will think about it but the countries would help. We will be helping whether in kind or whatever. But… nothing is decided yet.”
Passengers are being screened at the airports since three weeks ago to avoid the spread of contagious diseases, he added.
Ona said the DOH is upgrading the laboratory capacity of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM) in Muntinlupa in preparation for the possible entry of the Ebola virus.
The country needs to have “bio-safety level (BSL)-3” laboratory to effectively detect and do research on infectious diseases like the Ebola virus, he added.
The DOH is allocating some P500 million to put up the laboratory.
RITM director Socorro Lupisan said they now have a BSL-2 laboratory, which might not be equipped to deal with emerging pathogens like the Ebola virus.
“Right now, we are working on BSL-2 facilities but with the practices under BSL-3,” she said.
“We hope we get the BSL-3 to make sure even our laboratories are safe, that they are working in a safe environment. But of course, the actual practices are included there.”
Lupisan said a BSL-2 laboratory may be closed but  air can still circulate, while a BSL-3 involves a high-containment laboratory.
“It’s enclosed, with negative  pressure room, going in and going out,” she said. “The air is being filtered.”
Such a facility would mean that the Philippines will no longer have to send specimens to other countries like Japan for tests, Lupisan said.
The DOH and the RITM are now consulting with WHO and Japan for the establishment of a BSL-3 laboratory.
‘Avoid Ebola countries’
Filipinos were advised yesterday to refuse work in Ebola-affected countries.
Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said Filipino nurses and other health workers must not risk  accepting jobs in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
“We have an existing deployment ban in those countries which means their employment papers will not be legally processed,” she said.
“If they entertain such offers, they will just run the risk of being victimized by illegal recruiters.”
The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) will rely on the recommendation of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the DOH on whether to allow the re-entry of Filipino workers to these three countries, Baldoz said.
Health workers are now in demand in the three West African countries due to the growing number of people afflicted with Ebola.
However, the government has banned the deployment of Filipino workers to the three countries due to the Ebola epidemic.http://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/other/gov%E2%80%99t-mulls-bringing-home-pinoys-in-ebola-hit-countries/ar-BB97oS0

Brazil today confirmed if Guinean carries Ebola


First test was negative the patient; Government tightens security protocols


Brazil.- Brazil today confirmed a new blood test if the Guinean Souleymane Bah, who is confined in a hospital in Rio de Janeiro, is a carrier of the Ebola virus, after a first test gave negative.

Health authorities reported that, as required by protocol, blood samples were taken to Africa on Monday, 48 hours after the first analysis, to check for traces of the virus that has killed more than four thousand people and not yet reached South America. Brazil is moderately positive about the possible infection Bah, because the patient has no fever or symptoms since being admitted to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases Friday.


Brazil admitted last week that while it is "very low" risk of a case of Ebola occurs in Brazil is not "zero", so the Latin American country to extremes surveillance recent days after cases of infection in United States and Spain.

Brazilian authorities since August increased their controls at international airports in order to prevent the Ebola epidemic in West Africa proliferate within its borders, but refuses to take the temperature of travelers, considering it an ineffective measure. dpuf    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.elgolfo.info%2Felgolfo%2Fnota%2F281244%2F&edit-text=

First Ebola cases as possible in Brussels


Julian Thomas Published - Updated
Belgium For the third time since the beginning of the epidemic Ebola, Belgium faces the possibility of Ebola case in its territory. The first two times eventually proved false alarms. This time, according to our colleagues of the "Last Time", this is an individual who has recently traveled to Guinea and returned to Belgium in early October. The man was admitted on Monday, 13 October, at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Saint-Pierre in Brussels after being caught fever. After undergoing a series of tests, it is now in quarantine in a special unit of the hospital. The first results are expected Wednesday night. "There actually has a probable case Ebola in Belgium even if there is more likelihood that it will eventually malaria," confirmed on Monday afternoon Vinciane Charlier, the spokesman for the Federal Public Health.
"This person came back in early October in Belgium and developed a fever this morning. There is a security procedure that exists for people returning from countries where Ebola is present. Hence this patient was followed and Monday was taken to St. Peter's. It is now in quarantine. "
For now little information is available on the "identity of the person and Vinciane Charlier explained that the FPS Health is itself looking information. At most, it can confirm that s' is not the same case that the false warning Ebola declared Sunday in the same hospital in Brussels.  https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.lalibre.be%2Factu%2Fbelgique%2Fun-premier-cas-ebola-possible-a-bruxelles-543bf7d0357030e610466209&edit-text=

Ebola Nurse Boyfriend Reportedly Admitted With Ebola Symptoms

Ebola Nurse Boyfriend Reportedly Admitted With Ebola Symptoms

An email sent out to the Alcon staff by its CEO reportedly said that the ebola nurse’s boyfriend was admitted into hospital with “Ebola-like symptoms.”
Gotnews.com has received word from two different Alcon employees, both of whom asked not to be identified.
Alcon’s U.S. headquarters are in Fort Worth, Texas. It is an opthomological pharmaceutical company.
Requests for comment from Alcon were not returned.

Company won't take ash from Ebola victim apartment


2014-10-14 05:00
(Mike Stone, AFP)
(Mike Stone, AFP)
New Orleans - A Louisiana waste disposal facility says it will not accept the ashes generated when a Texas Ebola victim's belongings were incinerated, at least not until state officials agree that it would pose no threat to the public.
Chemical Waste Management Lake Charles said in a news release on Monday that it is permitted to accept such material and that it poses no threat to the environment or human health.
But, the company says, "we do not want to make an already complicated situation more complicated".
Thomas Eric Duncan became the first person to contract the disease within the United States. Duncan had travelled from Liberia to visit family.
Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell says he plans to go to court to block the transport of the waste to the Calcasieu Parish facility.   http://www.news24.com/World/News/Company-wont-take-ash-from-Ebola-victim-apartment-20141013

Polish Doctors Test Man For Ebola Virus


Warsaw:  A man has been hospitalised in Poland pending blood tests on whether he has the Ebola virus, but he had not travelled to Africa and the tests were being conducted as a precaution only, a health official said.
The 31-year-old man called for an ambulance on Monday, saying he was feeling unwell, and was taken to the Bieganski hospital in Lodz, about 130 km (80 miles) west of the Polish capital, according to Zbigniew Solarz, a spokesman for the local epidemiological service.


The symptoms he was showing could also be caused by a number of other diseases, for example malaria, Solarz said.

The man told medical staff that he had been in Germany where he had come into contact with people from Guinea, in West Africa, said Jan Bondar, a spokesman for Poland's sanitary inspectorate. Guinea, along with neighbouring Sierra Leone and Liberia has seen the worst outbreaks of the Ebola virus.

But Bondar also said it was unlikely the man could have been infected that way. He said he had not heard of any Ebola cases in Germany, and the man had not travelled to Africa himself.

"The man's blood is being tested. I think the result should be known tomorrow in the afternoon. I think this was an excess of caution."http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/polish-doctors-test-man-for-ebola-virus-606417?curl=1413255954

VDH Looking Into Possibly Screening Person for Ebola



Updated: Oct 13, 2014 10:29 PM EST By WRIC NewsroomConnect



RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) - Virginia Department of Health officials said that they are looking into if a patient who had recently traveled to Africa should be evaluated for possible Ebola exposure.
The individual went to the CrossOver Ministry clinic on Cowardin Avenue in Richmond.
In a conference call Monday evening, Dr. Don Stern, director of the Richmond City Health Department, said that the individual had been to Africa recently and displayed a low-grade fever.

The CDC requires certain criteria to be met before they allow the test to be administered.

This person met the criteria for having a travel history. Another criteria is that the person is showing symptoms of Ebola. This person has a low grade fever but as of now is not showing the other symptoms required.

The third criteria is that the person has come in contact with someone who had been diagnosed with Ebola. This person does not know of anyone that they have come in contact with who had Ebola.
That person is suppose to be heading to an area hospital to receive further testing. Sources tell 8News that this person is a female, though other details, such as age and name, remain unknown.

This information comes on the heels of the death of Thomas Eric Duncan, who died in a Texas hospital last week after being diagnosed with Ebola. Just today, the Dallas nurse who was infected with Ebola while treating a Liberian man has been identified as Nina Pham.
Pham tested positive for the disease this weekend, making her the first person to contract Ebola within the United States. Pham was identified by family members who confirmed her name to ABC News affiliate WFAA.
Crew are working to gather more information. Stay with 8news for the latest information on-air, online, and on social media.http://www.wric.com/story/26775995/v...rson-for-ebola

suspected #ebola at #MCV

Some families affected by Ebola in Liberia pay bribes to keep the bodies


Yahoo News

Liberia races to expand Ebola treatment facilities
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View gallery
A Liberian policeman watches as an Ebola burial team prepares to take away the body of Mekie Nagbe, 28, for cremation on October 10, 2014 in Monrovia, Liberia. Nagbe, a market vendor, collapsed and died outside her home earlier in the morning while leaving to walk to a treatment center, according to her relatives. The burial of loved ones is important in Liberian culture, making the removal of infected bodies for cremation all the more traumatic for surviving family members. (Getty Images/John Moore)
 
Health workers scrambling to contain the deadly Ebola virus in Liberia now have to contend with an outbreak of corruption among those detailed to collect the bodies of victims.

The Wall Street Journal reports that retrieval teams are accepting bribes from families of Ebola victims to issue death certificates that say their loved ones died of other causes, allowing them to keep their bodies for a traditional burial.
“The family says the person is not an Ebola patient, and [the retrieval team] pull them away from the other people," Vincent Chounse, a community outreach worker on the outskirts of Monrovia, told the paper. "Then they say, ‘We can give you a certificate from the Ministry of Health that it wasn’t Ebola.' Sometimes it is $40. Sometimes it is $50. ... Then they offer bags to them and [the family] carry on their own thing.” A teenager in Montserrado told the Journal he saw the father of his neighbor pay $150 for a certificate that said his son's corpse was Ebola-free.
Government Information Minister Lewis Brown told the paper his office has received reports of health workers issuing fake death certificates, but he added that no burial team has "a capacity to go and issue certificates."
According to the World Health Organization, more than 4,000 Ebola cases have been reported in Liberia, resulting in 2,316 deaths since the outbreak began.
But local health officials say the numbers are not adding up.
“We are not receiving the amount of community calls that we should be,” Agnes “Cokie” van der Velde, who oversees body collection teams for Doctors Without Borders, told the paper.
The grim task of removing bodies infected with Ebola is critical, health officials say, because the dead are a major source of contagion.
Working against them is the stigma associated with Ebola among West Africans, and the desire for the family to have a traditional burial. Often, communities will assume that one person infected with the disease means his or her entire family is infected and therefore is discriminated against and shunned.
Van der Velde said while she was not aware of body retrieval teams accepting bribes, they are nonetheless in a tricky position. “We try to be very respectful, but in the end what we’re doing is taking their loved one, zipping them in a bag and taking them away."   http://news.yahoo.com/ebola-families-bodies-bribes-153423993.html

The Worsening Ebola Crisis

The Worsening Ebola Crisis

Photo
An Ebola burial team carried the body of a woman through New Kru Town, a suburb of Monrovia, Liberia, on Oct. 10.  Credit John Moore/Getty Images
Recent days have brought two alarming developments in the struggle to contain Ebola. The campaign against the epidemic in West Africa, the only sure way to eliminate the risks of transmitting the virus to the United States and other countries, fell even further behind. And the discovery that a nurse treating an Ebola patient in Dallas had herself become infected despite wearing protective gear raised questions about the readiness of American hospitals to deal with Ebola patients.
Reassuring statements by health officials that virtually any hospital with an isolation unit could treat such patients now look rashly optimistic.
That said, the risk that the Ebola virus might cause outbreaks in this country remains small. By far the greater danger lies in the very real possibility that the virus will continue to spiral out of control in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone and spread from there to other parts of Africa or other continents, opening a wider range of pathways for infected people to reach the United States.
Many countries and international organizations, led by the United States, have pledged money, equipment and manpower to fight the epidemic in West Africa. But the aid has been slow to reach the front lines, leaving health care workers with too few treatment beds to accommodate the sick.
In Sierra Leone, on Friday, health officials — facing just such a shortage of beds — adopted a new policy of having families treat patients in their homes by distributing painkillers, rehydrating solutions and gloves to hundreds of Ebola-afflicted households. But if a nurse in Dallas, clothed in protective garments, could not escape infection, it is hard to believe that less well-equipped households in Sierra Leone will be able to escape contamination from an Ebola patient in their midst.
The pace of international aid needs to be stepped up dramatically. This is not a task that can be left to such nongovernmental organizations as Doctors Without Borders, which has heroically provided much, if not most, of the care in the stricken countries. The United States has taken the lead in providing aid to Liberia, a country with long ties to the United States.
The Army has started deploying thousands of troops to the area to help build new treatment centers, perform laboratory tests and train health care workers in how to treat patients, but most of that help has yet to arrive. It was thus disheartening to hear Maj. Gen. Darryl Williams, the commander of the United States Army Africa, dismiss criticism that American aid had been “too little, too late” with the excuse that the Pentagon was simply filling a “small gap” left by other health organizations.
The United States’ obligation is greater than that; President Obama needs personally to ramp up the urgency of the American response and the level and speed of the resources provided.
Perhaps the Dallas case will add urgency to those efforts to control the epidemic abroad. The case is not cause for domestic panic, but it is cause for greater vigilance among health care workers. Even without knowing fully what happened with the nurse, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is exploring ways to make it easier to don protective gear, wear it while treating a patient and take it off afterward without infecting oneself.
The task of treating Ebola patients can clearly be carried out by experienced personnel. Five Ebola patients were flown back to the United States from West Africa and have been treated safely at specially designated hospitals in Atlanta and Omaha.But the Dallas hospital made mistakes in handling this case from the start, and the infected nurse was reportedly a young graduate of a nursing program with little experience in infectious diseases. It seems possible that additional health care workers who cared for the patient will come down sick as well.
The C.D.C. is urging all hospitals, no matter how small, to take travel histories to identify any patients who have been in West Africa within the past 21 days, and immediately place those with Ebola-like symptoms in isolation. The C.D.C. plans to increase its training efforts for hospital personnel, a vital need given that a survey of nurses found a vast majority had received no instructions from their hospitals on how to deal with Ebola. Smaller hospitals will probably have to transfer any Ebola patients to more specialized centers for treatment.
But all of these efforts, however useful, pale against this country’s much larger responsibility to help defeat the disease at its source. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/14/opinion/the-worsening-ebola-crisis.html?_r=0

BREAKING UPDATE ON EBOLA EVALUATION

Obama Meets with Senior Advisors on Ebola

Obama Meets with Senior Advisors on Ebola

by Keith Koffler on October 13, 2014, 3:17 pm
Updated 6:37 pm ET
President Obama is meeting this afternoon with both national security and health care advisors to discuss the Ebola situation, the White House said today.
The meeting appears to have been called rather hastily.
In on the gathering are National Security Advisor Susan Rice, HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell, White House Homeland Security Advisor Lisa Monaco, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Tom Frieden, who is participating by telephone.
The press corps will be invited in to take a picture, but no questions please.
UPDATE: Post-meeting from the White House:
The President was briefed on the status of the investigation into the apparent breach in infection control protocols at the Dallas hospital and remedial actions underway to mitigate similar breaches in the future. Secretary Burwell and Dr. Frieden described the surge in personnel and other resources to Dallas to assist in the investigation as well as other measures to heighten awareness and increase training for healthcare workers throughout the country.
The President reinforced that this investigation should proceed as expeditiously as possible and that lessons learned should be integrated into future response plans and disseminated to hospitals and healthcare workers nationwide. 

Richmond clinic isolates patient to evaluate possible Ebola risk


Ebola Scare Prompts Terrorist Threat Investigation


Buses were sequestered at a yard in downtown Los Angeles after a bus passenger said he had Ebola

Los Angeles County Metro buses are sequestered in a yard near downtown Los Angeles after a passenger said he had Ebola on Monday, Oct. 13, 2014.
Authorities said they'd open a terrorist threat investigation after a passenger on a bus said he had Ebola.
The bus driver was examined by paramedics and taken to a hospital after the incident reported at 1:45 p.m. The man did not have a fever and appeared to be in good health, said Metro spokesman Paul Gonzales.
The man who said he had Ebola got on the bus at Venice Boulevard and Hoover Street.
He was wearing a surgical mask and was with another woman who did not have a surgical mask on.
He told the driver, "You better not mess with me because I have Ebola," according to Gonzales.
All the passengers, including the man who said he had Ebola, got off the bus at one point and the man disappeared, Gonzales said.
The man "sort of just disappeared into the world," Gonzales said.
Authorities would review surveillance video to see if they can identify the passenger.http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/Man-on-Bus-Said-He-Had-Ebola-279072531.html

Thursday, October 9, 2014

#Ebola Scare: 1,332 Nigerian Soldiers Quarantined In Liberia

Ebola Scare: 1,332 Nigerian Soldiers Quarantined In Liberia

The Nigerian Army has revealed that about 1332 of its peace keeping troops in Liberia have been placed under surveillance following their contact with a Sudanese who later died of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).
The director of the Nigerian Army Medical Corps, Major-General Obashina Ogunbiyi stated this in Abuja yesterday.
According to the Army medical officer, the incident followed the death of a Sudanese Muslim man who had come to the camp of the soldiers to lead them in prayer during the Eid-el Fitri celebration, but developed Ebola symptoms the following day and later died.
Ogunbuyi noted that the country remained at risk as any of the soldiers could choose to travel home anytime, saying “that is why the military had to be totally involved in the fight against the Ebola virus.”..  http://leadership.ng/news/386602/ebola-scare-1332-nigerian-soldiers-quarantined-liberia

Brazil-The Health Ministry confirmed to the Mail that "suspected virus in the country"

UPA in Cascavel, Paraná, is interdicted after suspected ebola
The Health Ministry confirmed to the Mail that "suspected virus in the country"
Published: 09/10/2014 22:56 Updated: 10/09/2014 23:47

An Emergency Unit (APU) in Cascavel, Paraná, was banned late on Thursday (9/10) after a man being hospitalized with suspected Ebola. The Ministry of Health sent a team to the city, through the Brazilian Air Force (FAB), which coordinate in situ measures of care and to identify possible contacts for guidance and control.

According to the Ministry of Health, it is a man, aged 47, from Guinea (scale in Morocco), country of origin, who arrived in Brazil on September 19. He reported that he had a fever for three days to decide to seek care. Also according to the ministry, until the early evening, the patient had no bleeding, vomiting or other symptoms.



The patient will be transferred as security protocol for the National Institute of Infectious Evandro Chagas in Rio de Janeiro, national reference for cases of Ebola. The transfer will be made by aircraft from the Federal Highway Police.

The MS reported that, by being in the twenty-first day, to the maximum incubation period of the disease, cases were considered suspect, following international protocols for the disease. "Guinea is one of three countries that concentrate the outbreak of the disease in Africa. Ebola is transmitted only through contact with blood, tissues or bodily fluids of sick individuals, or by contact with contaminated objects and surfaces. The virus is only transmitted when symptoms arise, "he explained in a statement.https://translate.google.com/transla...tml&edit-text=

Ministry of Health of Paraná reports on suspected cases of Ebola in the state

9/10/2014 23:35:13
The patient will be transferred to the National Institute of Infectious Evandro Chagas in Rio de Janeiro

The Day


Paraná - The Ministry of Health and the Secretary of State of Paraná Health show that the Emergency Unit Brasilia in Cascavel (PR) received on Thursday, a patient classified as a suspected Ebola infection. This is a man, aged 47, from Guinea (scale in Morocco), country of origin, who arrived in Brazil on September 19. He reported that yesterday (8) and this morning (9) had fever. By the early evening, was subfebrile and had no bleeding, vomiting or other symptoms. Is in good general condition and kept in total isolation.
By being on the twentieth day maximum incubation period for the disease, cases were considered suspect, following international protocols for the disease. Guinea is one of three countries that concentrate the outbreak of the disease in Africa. Ebola is transmitted only through contact with blood, tissues or bodily fluids of sick individuals, or by contact with contaminated objects and surfaces. The virus is only transmitted when symptoms arise.
The patient will be transferred as security protocol for the National Institute of Infectious Evandro Chagas in Rio de Janeiro (RJ), national reference for cases of Ebola. The transfer will be made by aircraft from the Federal Highway Police.https://translate.google.com/transla...tml&edit-text=

A possible case of Ebola is recorded in Brazil, the first in Latin America

A possible case of Ebola is recorded in Brazil, the first in Latin America

Posted: October 10, 2014 | 2:14 GMT Last Updated: October 10, 2014


Texto completo en: https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/142954-brasil-posible-caso-ebola&usg=ALkJrhgxocENjRAOlfFsxD6BSK2lBHqXqg
 2:14 GMT Last Updated: October 10, 2014
In the Brazilian city of Cascavel Parana is registered in a first possible case of Ebola that, if confirmed, would be the first in Latin America.   According to local authorities, the man who has any symptoms of Ebola was isolated and transferred to Rio de Janeiro, reports O Globo. His identity has not been revealed yet.  Previously transcended in Brazil other possible cases of infection by Ebola, but were not confirmed. The new patient with symptoms is undergoing tests to confirm if you have the disease.  The virus has not been detected so far in Latin America, while in the USA have registered at least 6 cases of infection.   Texto completo en: https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/142954-brasil-posible-caso-ebola&usg=ALkJrhgxocENjRAOlfFsxD6BSK2lBHqXqg
In the Brazilian city of Cascavel Parana is registered in a first possible case of Ebola that, if confirmed, would be the first in Latin America.
According to local authorities, the man who has any symptoms of Ebola was isolated and transferred to Rio de Janeiro, reports O Globo. His identity has not been revealed yet.

Previously transcended in Brazil other possible cases of infection by Ebola, but were not confirmed. The new patient with symptoms is undergoing tests to confirm if you have the disease.
The virus has not been detected so far in Latin America, while in the USA have registered at least 6 cases of infection.


Texto completo en: https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/142954-brasil-posible-caso-ebola&usg=ALkJrhgxocENjRAOlfFsxD6BSK2lBHqXqg

Ebola fears widen as Spanish nurse worsens


The condition of a Spanish nurse who contracted the virus from a patient has worsened as more of her contacts were quarantined. The US's top public health official claims Ebola poses the greatest challenge since AIDS.
The condition of auxiliary nurse Teresa Romero was said to have worsened on Thursday, with the daily newspaper El Pais reporting on its website that she had suffered a respiratory failure.
Spain quarantined seven more people, including two hairdressers who had contact with the nurse who became infected with the deadly virus at Madrid's Carlos III hospital.
Romero helped treat two Spanish priests who were flown home from West Africa having been diagnosed. She is the first person believed to have contracted the disease outside of Africa and has admitted that she may have touched her face with protective gloves used for cleaning the room of one of the patients.
In addition to the Spanish case, which has generated concern over the alleged lack of training and equipping of staff, the alarm has been raised in two other parts of Europe.
Ebola-Infizierter in Skopje The hotel where the British man stayed in Skopje is now under guard
A British man showing symptoms of the Ebola virus, but not having tested positive for it, died in Macedonia on Thursday. Authorities said they had sealed off a hotel where the man had stayed and that fellow guests were being monitored.
A Prague hospital is also monitoring a 56-year-old Czech man who exhibited symptoms of Ebola. The man, who recently traveled in Liberia, was said to be in isolation at Bulovka hospital.
Health officials from the German state of Saxony confirmed on Thursday that a third Ebola patient, diagnosed while in Liberia where he worked for the UN, had arrived in the country. The man, who originates from Sudan, was being treated at Leipzig's St. Georg Clinic - one of seven health facilities in Germany with the capability to treat highly infectious patients in isolation.

Two other Ebola patients have also been flown to Germany in recent weeks. A World Health Organization (WHO) employee had fallen ill with the hemorrhagic fever in Sierre Leone was brought to Hamburg, where doctors were able to stabilize him and eventually release him last week.
Doctors in Frankfurt am Main continue to treat a second patient, a Ugandan doctor and WHO worker, who had also contracted the virus in Sierra Leone.
The threat posed by the most recent outbreak of Ebola was reminiscent of that presented by the AIDS virus, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Tom Frieden said on Thursday.
"I would say that in the 30 years since I have been working in public health, the only thing like this has been AIDS, and we have to work now so that this is not the world's next AIDS," Frieden said.
rc/lw (AP, AFP, Reuters) http://www.dw.de/ebola-fears-widen-as-spanish-nurse-worsens/a-17985598

Ebola suspected in death of Briton in Macedonia: source


SKOPJE Thu Oct 9, 2014 1:38pm EDT

(Reuters) - A British man suspected of contracting the Ebola virus has died in Macedonia, a senior Macedonian government official said on Thursday, a further sign that the disease is spreading in Europe.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters a second Briton had also shown symptoms of the virus.
He said the two had been staying at a hotel in the capital Skopje and that hotel staff and the ambulance crew that took them in for treatment had been put into isolation.
The virus, which is spread through direct contact with body fluids from an infected person, has killed nearly 4,000 people in West Africa since March, in the largest outbreak on record.
The health of a Spanish nurse, the first person believed to have contracted Ebola outside of Africa, worsened on Thursday in Madrid, where a total of seven people are in isolation. http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/09/us-health-ebola-macedonia-idUSKCN0HY1YE20141009

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

General: If #Ebola Reaches Central America, 'There Will Be Mass Migration into the U.S.'


9:23 AM, Oct 8, 2014 • By JERYL BIER
Those looking for good news on the fight against Ebola will not find much encouragement from Marine Corps Gen. John F. Kelly, the commander of the U.S. Southern Command. As Jim Garamone of Department of Defense News reports, Kelly told an audience at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday that, if the disease reaches Central America, "it’s literally, ‘Katie bar the door,’ and there will be mass migration into the United States." He also said with certainty that "there is no way we can keep Ebola [contained] in West Africa."
“By the end of the year, there’s supposed to be 1.4 million people infected with Ebola and 62 percent of them dying, according to the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]..." 
“So, much like West Africa, it will rage for a period of time,” Kelly said. 
This is particularly possible scenario if the disease gets to Haiti or Central America, he said. If the disease gets to countries like Guatemala, Honduras or El Salvador, it will cause a panic and people will flee the region, the general said. 
“If it breaks out, it’s literally, ‘Katie bar the door,’ and there will be mass migration into the United States,” Kelly said. “They will run away from Ebola, or if they suspect they are infected, they will try to get to the United States for treatment.”
Kelly said that human trafficking could be an additional wrinkle in the battle to contain the disease. He related a disturbing anecdote from a recent visit to Central America where some men from Liberia were headed to the United States:
Also, transnational criminal networks smuggle people and those people can be carrying Ebola, the general said. Kelly spoke of visiting the border of Costa Rica and Nicaragua with U.S. embassy personnel. At that time, a group of men “were waiting in line to pass into Nicaragua and then on their way north,” he recalled. 
“The embassy person walked over and asked who they were and they told him they were from Liberia and they had been on the road about a week,” Kelly continued. “They met up with the network in Trinidad and now they were on their way to the United States -- illegally, of course.” 
Those men, he said, “could have made it to New York City and still be within the incubation period for Ebola.”
Earlier this year, General Kelly gave some chilling testimony about the limitations on the United States's ability to protect the southern border:
In spring hearings before the Senate and House Armed Services Committees, Kelly said that budgets cuts are “severely degrading” the military’s ability to defend southern approaches to the U.S border. Last year, he said, his task force was unable to act on nearly 75 percent of illicit trafficking events. “I simply sit and watch it go by,” he said. But the potential threats are even greater. Kelly warned that neglect has created vulnerabilities that can be exploited by terrorist groups, describing a “crime-terror convergence” already seen in Lebanese Hezbollah’s involvement in the region.
While Centers for Disease Control director Tom Frieden recently expressed some optimism in the fight against Ebola in West Africa, he acknowledged that "globally, this is going to be a long, hard fight."  http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/general-if-ebola-reaches-central-america-there-will-be-mass-migration-us_810793.html

#Ebola patient in Dallas dies

Ebola patient in Dallas dies

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Thomas Eric Duncan circa 2005
Source: Josephus Weeks
Thomas Eric Duncan circa 2005
Thomas Eric Duncan, the first known person to develop Ebola in the United States, has died in Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, according to Texas Health Resources.
"It is with profound sadness and heartfelt disappointment that we must inform you of the death of Thomas Eric Duncan this morning at 7:51 am. Mr. Duncan succumbed to an insidious disease, Ebola. He fought courageously in this battle. Our professionals, the doctors and nurses in the unit, as well as the entire Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas community, are also grieving his passing. We have offered the family our support and condolences at this difficult time," the Texas Health Resources statement said.http://www.cnbc.com/id/102070648

Turkish worker employed in Africa rushed to Istanbul hospital on Ebola suspicion

A Turkish worker employed in Nigeria was rushed to an Istanbul hospital Oct. 8 on suspicion of Ebola, after showing signs of a high fever and diarrhea. The incident comes amid concerns regarding the spread of the pandemic in Europe, with a number of new cases detected in Spain.

The 46-year-old man, whose identity has not been disclosed, returned to Turkey 10 days ago from Africa to see his family in the western province of Sakarya during the Feast of the Sacrifice holiday.

Medical sources said he went to a private hospital four days ago in Adapazarı, but his fever did not drop despite medical treatment. Following medical examinations, doctors informed the Health Ministry that he may be showing symptoms of Ebola.

He was then transferred to Haseki Hospital in Istanbul using a specially equipped ambulance.

The incident is the second case of a suspected Ebola patient in Turkey, after a Nigerian woman who transited through Istanbul’s Atatürk Airport while traveling from Lagos to Barcelona was rushed to hospital in mid-August.

The woman was later diagnosed with malaria and was allowed to leave Turkey. The outbreak has killed over 3,300 people in West Africa and millions have been taken under quarantine in affected countries such as Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that without drastic action, the epidemic might spread and triple the cases in the African continent, increasing the risk of a global pandemic.

October/08/2014

Sierra Leone News: British Nurse heads back to Sierra Leone


William Pooley, and HE Edward TurayA British Ebola survivor says he is on his way to Sierra Leone to continue his mission in the fight against the deadly Ebola virus – a virus which continues to claim lives in the sub-region.
William Pooley, 29, said, “I cannot sit here in the UK and watch the people of Sierra Leone die without doing nothing – I must go back to Sierra Leone to continue my work in helping those people affected by Ebola.”

In an interview at Lancaster House in London, outside the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s “Defeat Ebola in Sierra Leone” conference, Pooley said his mission in Sierra Leone would never be complete until Ebola was contained and eradicated.
Inside the conference itself, Pooley was asked to give an account of his experience in Sierra Leone as an Ebola survivor. The British nurse was unable to control his emotions as he burst into tears during his speech.
Visibly upset and consumed by his emotions, Pooley retold the pathetic case of a brother and sister, aged four and two, who he cared for in Sierra Leone.
He said “at all costs” the international community must not allow what happened to them to be repeated one million times.
His emotional plea at the conference came as 34 NGOs joined forces to warn the international community they have just four weeks to stop the Ebola crisis from “spiralling completely out of control”.

“I am coming to your embassy to get my visa next week and by mid this month I should be on my way to Sierra Leone,” Pooley said. He has been widely considered not only as a hero but a saviour for the people of Sierra Leone.

Sierra Leone News: Teenage pregnancy on the increase in Kailahun – KWiGN president


As a result of the Ebola scourge, parents including the President of the Kailahun Women in Governance Network (KWiGN), Madam Lucy Foray Gondor, have expressed concern over the increased number of teenage pregnancy among pupils in Kailahun and beyond.
Kailahun Women in Governance Network (KWiGN) is a Community-based Organisation (CBS) that operates in Kailahun District on governance and other related issues, targeting poor and marginalised women in society, with the aim of ensuring that women play vital roles in leadership and governance matter.
According to the President of KWiGN, Madam Lucy Foray Gondor, with the out-break of the deadly Ebola disease in their District in May this year, women are vulnerable and at a high risk of contracting the disease, while looking after the sick at home and also engaged in domestic activities, which is similar to the suffering they went through during the 11 years civil war, explaining that their numbers have reduced drastically, as many of them have lost their lives including some children.
She disclosed that the lives of their children, especially the girls are at stake, simply because education is presently going down the drain, as most of their girl-child have been impregnated, which has led to the high number of teenage pregnancy in the District and beyond- a situation she described as a major challenge in the post-Ebola period, adding that the children are not doing anything at the moment which exposed them to all funny acts.
The Women leader maintained that education at the part of the country is very poor, especially among the women, as the poorly- educated women in the district are the ones dying with the out-break including female nurses, women leaders who take the Ebola campaign to the interior and women advocators.
She said this is worrisome at the moment in the district, expressing appreciation on the innovation of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, together with their partners in introducing the radio educational system that will help build the capacity of their children, who are presently losing a lot in their educational carrier.
Veronica Mansaray, a mother of three, with one who was preparing for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE), disclosed that her child was assisting her in doing some petty trading due to the indefinite closure of schools but is now three months pregnant, a situation that have caused her  to lose focus at the moment, adding that she will make sure her child spends more time listening to the radio education programme, so that she can be on track with her classmate, but expressed doubt, if her child will be in a position to complete the coming BECE exams after the out-break will have been settled, due to her present condition.
By Alhaji M. Kamara
Wednesday October 08, 2014

Liberia: Grand Kru Residents Seize Medical Vehicle Over Slow Ebola Response


Sorpoparluken District in the undeveloped Grand Kru County has become the latest area in the Southeast to be hit by the deadly Ebola virus that had already claimed several lives in other parts of the country.
The death toll from the outbreak of the disease in this district experiencing the bad road condition had reached up to 15 persons so far, according to a civil society member who had been in the county for at least two months, now back in Monrovia. Brima Lahai Sowa told FrontPageAfrica Tuesday that the outbreak of the virus in this remote district came about when a woman suspected of the virus came from Monrovia and went to a nearby town of Kanwenkea for a visit but later fell sick and died.
He claimed that during the course of her illness another family member of hers called Comfort Duyan came from the Sorpoparluken District to take care of her, but upon her return, she too contracted the virus and died along with 15 other members of her household.
Sowa claimed that the County Health Team of Grand Kru headed by one Dr. Keita is unable to contain the current outbreak of the disease in the district due to the lack of an isolation center coupled with the lack of good road to connect the health team to the area as all the roads and bridges connecting the towns have been damaged due to the rainy season.
He said at the time of the virus outbreak citizens of the county first denied the existence of the virus and considered it to be that of witchcraft activities making the virus to increase because not many people believe in it. According to Sowa the citizens of the county had told him that they cannot cooperate with local leaders in the fight against this deadly Ebola virus because the government had been very insensitive to the plight of the citizens since the outbreak.
The civil society member stated that in order for the government to fight to eradicate the virus from the country, it had to be serious to enforce the law that will cause the people to abandon some of their traditional practices in the wake of the outbreak of this virus.
"Do you imagine that when one of the traditional leaders of Grand Kru County, died recently the people had to dance for two weeks as a sign of respect shown to their traditional leader while they ate and drink in one cup do you imagine" said Brima.
 When FrontPageAfrica contacted a local journalist of the community radio the Voice of Grand Kru Eric Gbasue, he confirmed exactly what the civil society member Brima Sowa confirmed adding that the situation remains the same and no improvement yet.
Journalist Gbasue stated that because of the alarming rate of the situation the Superintendant of the County Elizabeth Dempster has contacted the UNMIL to transport the affected persons to health centers in the county, but to no avail because the UNMIL officials had told her that they have never flown to the area before to know the terrain therefore cannot take such a risk.
He told FrontPageAfrica that health workers traveling to Kanwekan on Tuesday vehicle was seized by the citizens who claimed that the health workers only go in for dead body and don't care to take away the sick where there is no isolation center in the area.
"As I speak to you now the death toll in the area has reached to 23 persons while health workers traveling to Kanweken vehicle was seized as a protest by the citizens that they are only concerned about dead bodies and not to treat the sick" said Journalist Gbasue.
 http://allafrica.com/stories/201410081180.html

Supt. Buway and staff survive Ebola suspects’ threat

Supt. Buway and staff survive Ebola suspects’ threat

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After being threatened by Ebola suspects, Margibi County Superintendent, John Zubah Buway, has reopened his offices in the county. Superintendent Buway was constrained to close his offices on September 24, 2014 after he and his officials, including county inspector, assistant superintendent for development and other staffers were threatened with Ebola infection by Ebola suspects in Kakata, leading to the escape of the county inspector.
Recently, some Ebola suspects barricaded the offices of Superintendent Buway, demanding to be taken to holding centers in the county and better support for their lives. The suspects said their relatives died showing symptoms of the virus, admitting that they came in contact with them.
The Ebola suspects said they were tired of calling on the Margibi County Health Team to go to their aid in taking them to the treatment center for care. The suspects threatened that any time they were denied access to Superintendent Buway’s offices without being attended to, they (suspects) would rush in and touch anyone found in the premises. The situation had scared the superintendent and his co-workers to abandon office for fear of contracting the disease.
http://www.thenewdawnliberia.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12915:-supt-buway-and-staff-survive-ebola-suspects-threat&catid=3:general&Itemid=68 

Ebola outbreak: Third Spanish health worker put in hospital

Published: Oct 8, 2014 6:37 a.m. ET

Nurse’s aide under observation

MADRID — A third nurse’s aide who treated an Ebola patient in Madrid checked into a hospital Tuesday night and was under observation, the government said on Wednesday.
A spokesman for Spain’s regional health department said the hospital worker, whose name wasn’t disclosed, had a slight fever, one possible early symptom of Ebola. The aide was part of the medical team that treated Manuel García Viejo, a 69-year-old Spanish missionary who contracted Ebola in Sierra Leone and was evacuated to Madrid. He died in late September.
On Monday, Spain’s government said a 44-year-old nurse’s aide who also treated the missionary, had contracted Ebola and was under quarantine.
By Tuesday, the government also quarantined her husband, a second nurse’s aide and a man who had recently traveled to Spain from Nigeria. On Tuesday evening, the government said the second nurse’s aide had tested negative twice for Ebola, but she remained under hospital supervision.
The first transmission of Ebola outside West Africa is a concern for European governments who have been relying on standardized Ebola protocols to avoid spreading the disease as they care for repatriated patients who contracted it in Africa. European authorities called for an investigation to determine whether any treatment protocols had been breached.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ebola-outbreak-third-spanish-health-worker-put-in-hospital-2014-10-08?link=MW_home_latest_news

Liberian prostitute kills eight soldiers via Ebola transmission

08 October, 2014 13:37

Image by: Gallo Images/ Thinkstock

A soldier who slept with a Liberian sex worker apparently contracted the Ebola disease and spread it to seven other soldiers whom he shared the same barracks with.

According to the Liberian Observer, a sex worker visited soldier Floson Louise at his army barracks in Liberia.
“When she slept at the EBK (barracks), it was thereafter the soldiers contracted the disease, and could not survive despite “intensive treatment” at the various Ebola Treatment Units in Monrovia,” a source told the Observer.
The sex worker was suffering from Ebola and passed the deadly disease to the soldier who unknowingly spread it to seven other soldiers. The Observer further reports that the army barracks are being decongested to ease the spread of the disease.  http://www.timeslive.co.za/africa/2014/10/08/liberian-prostitute-kills-eight-soldiers-via-ebola-transmission

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Defense Department Admits US Troops In Liberia Will "Come In Contact" With Ebola-Infected Individuals

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With boots-on-the-ground heading to Liberia to help 'manage' the anarchic dystopia that a frightened nation has become, General David Rodriguez (Commander, US Africa Command) held a briefing today to explain US troops' role:
  • QUESTION: Will they be in contact with individuals or just specimens?
  •  RODRIGUEZ: They come in contact with the individuals.
Of course this was followed by a stream of qualifiers that all protection possible will be taken (just like the nurses in Madrid?)
Via Bloomberg Transcript,
KIRBY: Afternoon, everybody. I'm proud to welcome into the briefing room General David Rodriguez, commander of Africa Command. He's here to give you an update on U.S. contributions to the effort against Ebola -- U.S. military contributions to the effort against Ebola in West Africa. And with that, sir, I'll turn it over to you.

QUESTION: Just a clarification on that, please. Will they be in contact with individuals or just specimens?

GENERAL DAVID M. RODRIGUEZ (USA), COMMANDER, U.S. AFRICA COMMAND: They come in contact with the individuals and they do that. And they're -- like I said, it's a -- it's a very, very high standard that these people have operated in all their lives, and this is their primary skill. This is not a -- you know, just medical guys trained to do this. This is what they do for a living.