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Monday, September 22, 2014

CDC issues alarming new Ebola warning for crews of U.S. airlines

'Treat any body fluid as though it is infectious': CDC issues alarming new Ebola warning for crews of U.S. airlines

  • The agency stressed that airlines may 'deny boarding to air travelers with serious contagious diseases that could spread during flight' on Friday
  • The rule applies to all U.S. airlines and to foreign airlines flying directly in or out of the country 
  • Ebola has infected at least 5,357 people in West Africa and has killed 2,630 of those
  • Thousands of U.S. soldiers are slated to enter Africa to help stem the out-of-control outbreak over the next 30 days


The Center for Disease Control has issued new, strict guidelines for airline crews in an attempt to stop Ebola from spreading outside West Africa.
Released Friday, the new guidance stresses that flight crews should 'treat any body fluid as though it it is infectious,' as the out-of-control outbreak claims thousands of lives in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Senegal.
The warning comes as 3000 U.S. troops start to deploy to the developing nations to set up facilities and form training teams to help the Africans treat victims of the gruesome disease. 

'TREAT ANY BODY FLUID AS IF IT IS INFECTIOUS': MAIN POINTS OF CDC'S NEW FLIGHT CREW GUIDELINES AMID EBOLA FEARS

The CDC has released new guidelines concerning the handling of sick passengers as Ebola digs its heels deeper into West Africa:
  • A U.S. Department of Transportation rule permits airlines to deny boarding to air travelers with serious contagious diseases that could spread during flight, including travelers with possible Ebola symptoms. This rule applies to all flights of U.S. airlines, and to direct flights (no change of planes) to or from the United States by foreign airlines.
  • Cabin crew should follow routine infection control precautions for onboard sick travelers. If in-flight cleaning is needed, cabin crew should follow routine airline procedures using personal protective equipment available in the Universal Precautions Kit. If a traveler is confirmed to have had infectious Ebola on a flight, CDC will conduct an investigation to assess risk and inform passengers and crew of possible exposure.
  • Hand hygiene and other routine infection control measures should be followed.
  • Treat all body fluids as though they are infectious.
Source: CDC.gov 
The CDC stressed in its release that, per U.S. law,  American airlines and foreign airlines traveling non-stop to or from the country are permitted airlines 'to deny boarding to air travelers with serious contagious diseases that could spread during flight.'
In July, a sick Nigeria man managed to board a plane in Liberia and took the deadly virus with him to Lagos.
Officials moved swiftly to tamp out the spread in Africa's most populous city after the man passed Ebola to several healthcare workers.
 

None of his fellow passengers appear to have contracted the disease in-flight.
Nonetheless, fears remain that a traveler could potentially facilitate that spread of Ebola beyond the confines of West Africa. 
Meanwhile, thousands of promised American forces will be moving into Africa over the next 30 days to set up facilities and form training teams to help the Africans treat Ebola victims, the Army's top officer said Friday...

US troops heading into Africa soon for Ebola fight


US troops heading into Africa soon for Ebola fight

WASHINGTON — The top U.S. Army officer says thousands of promised American forces will be moving into Africa over the next 30 days to set up facilities and form training teams to help the Africans treat Ebola victims.
Gen. Ray Odierno says the disease has accelerated faster than initially thought, so the U.S. needs to get people on the ground and ramp up numbers quickly. President Barack Obama has pledged 3,000 troops, and the U.S. military commander and a small team have arrived in Liberia to do initial assessments.
Before troops are sent in, Odierno says the Army needs to make sure they are prepared to operate in that environment, which includes health care safety. The military units expected to deploy have not been identified.
Meanwhile in Monrovia, Liberia,  The U.S. Embassy said Friday that the first shipment of increased American military aid to help fight the Ebola epidemic had landed in the West African country.
A C-17 U.S. military aircraft brought a team of seven military personnel along with some equipment on Thursday. An embassy statement said more supplies and personnel are expected in the coming days.
The U.S. Embassy says Maj. Gen. Darryl Williams arrived in the country on Tuesday and has been meeting with Liberian officials.
President Barack Obama on Tuesday announced the United States is sending 3,000 troops to help fight the Ebola outbreak that has killed more than 2,600 people across West Africa. More than half the deaths have occurred in Liberia.

"Man bitten by Ebola patient flown to Switzerland"



"GENEVA -- Swiss authorities say a male nurse who was bitten by an Ebola patient while working in West Africa has been flown to Switzerland as a precaution.

The health ministry says the unidentified man was working for an international organization in Sierra Leone when he was bitten by a child infected with Ebola on Saturday.

The ministry says the nurse was wearing protective gear and is unlikely to have contracted the disease.

It said the man, who was flown to Switzerland by a private transport company Monday, will be kept under observation at Geneva's University Hospital for the incubation period of three weeks.

The ministry said it was the first medical transport to Switzerland from the Ebola-affected region."[link to www.sacbee.com]

Streets bustling after Sierra Leone shutdown ends

Sep 22, 1:49 PM EDT



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FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -- Streets in Sierra Leone's capital bustled again Monday after an unprecedented nationwide shutdown during which officials said more than 1 million households were checked for Ebola patients and given information on how to prevent the spread of the deadly disease.
The government delayed an announcement on how many new cases had been discovered.
The national health system, already hit by the Ebola deaths of several leading doctors and many nurses, would be further strained if many additional patients were found.
Sierra Leone and Liberia, which have been hardest hit in this outbreak, have only about 20 percent of the beds they need to treat patients, according to the World Health Organization.
The Sierra Leone government has ordered tents for temporary treatment centers to make room for those additional cases, said Abdulai Bayraytay, a government spokesman.
Liberia opened a 150-bed treatment center on Sunday, its largest so far, and ambulances immediately rushed patients there. By Monday, the new clinic had admitted 112 people, though only 46 of those have tested positive for Ebola, said Assistant Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah. The rest are being held for observation and treated for other diseases, like malaria.
Ebola, transmitted through bodily fluids, is blamed for the deaths of more than 2,800 people in West Africa, according to new figures released Monday by the World Health Organization. More than 5,800 people are believed to have been sickened in the outbreak. The vast majority of the cases and deaths have been in Liberia but the disease has also affected Guinea, Nigeria and Senegal.
The hardest hit countries have resorted to extraordinary measures. Liberia has cordoned off entire towns or neighborhoods and Sierra Leone's nationwide shutdown is believed to be the most sweeping lockdown against disease since the Middle Ages.
During Sierra Leone's shutdown, at least 77 bodies were buried during the shutdown and half of them tested positive for Ebola, Bayraytay, the spokesman, said. Officials are waiting on laboratory tests for the other half to see whether they also died of Ebola. The disease is thought to have killed more than 600 people in Sierra Leone, a nation of 6 million.
The number of new suspected Ebola cases that were discovered during the lockdown will be announced by Sierra Leone authorities at a press conference Tuesday, originally scheduled for Monday.
There is little reason to believe the lockdown had been effective in ending transmission since such measures are so hard to enforce, said Joe Amon, director of health and human rights for Human Rights Watch. Frustrated residents complained of food shortages in some neighborhoods.
"You could argue that it's strictly necessary not because it's an effective way to break transmission but because it's necessary to reach people with communication messages," he said.
Teams carrying soap and information about Ebola reached about 75 percent of 1.5 million households in this nation, the Health Ministry said. Rumors that the soap being distributed had been poisoned showed the importance of education efforts.
Sierra Leone residents overwhelmingly complied by staying in their homes but in one incident health workers trying to bury five bodies 20 kilometers (12 miles) east of Freetown were attacked on Saturday. After police reinforcements arrived, the health workers completed the burial.
Nearly 350 health workers in West Africa have been infected, and more than half of those have died. A Spanish priest who became infected while serving as a medical director for a hospital in Sierra Leone was flown back to Spain on Monday.
There are no approved treatments or vaccines for Ebola, but officials have been trying out experimental drugs during this outbreak. The small supply of one drug, ZMapp, was exhausted after being used on a few patients.
On Monday, Tekmira Pharmaceuticals of Canada said that its experimental Ebola treatment had been used for a number of patients, and regulators in the U.S. and Canada had approved its use in more. It said the drug had been well tolerated so far.
Tekmira said there were limited supplies of its TKM-Ebola drug and because it has not been used in an actual study, the company acknowledged it is impossible to tell if it had any effect.
---  http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/E/EBOLA?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-09-22-13-15-16

Paper: West Africa could see 4,400 new Ebola cases in September

Paper: West Africa could see 4,400 new Ebola cases in September

Sept. 22, 2014 9:57 a.m.
A new paper in PLOS Currents: Outbreaks by SFI External Professor Carlos Castillo-Chavez and co-authors examines the complex dynamics of the 2014 Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa.
To model the rapid evolution of both the virus and the efforts to contain it, the researchers applied time-series analysis and other statistical methods to World Health Organization data for Ebola in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. They found that in Liberia and Guinea, the transmission rate accelerated when military-enforced quarantines were imposed. This finding calls into question the effectiveness of enforced quarantines, which gather sick and healthy persons together in unsanitary conditions.
The researchers also predict that the last half of September will see 4,400 new Ebola cases in West Africa if the current transmission rates continue http://www.santafe.edu/news/item/ebola-control-complex-adaptive-system/

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Liberian Journalist Succumbs to Deadly Ebola Virus Disease

Monrovia - A Liberian journalist Yaya Kromah has fallen to the deadly Ebola virus. His sister who works for the Carter Center office in Monrovia posted the information on social media and also informed the Press Union of Liberia Thursday afternoon.

The journalist died at the Ebola Treatment Center at the J.F.K. Hospital in Monrovia, while his entire family (Airfield-Matadi) was quarantined after he was taken to the hospital.

It is not clear whether the journalist contracted the virus while he was doing his reportorial duties, but sources said he had allegedly gone to seek the help of a herbalist after he developed problems with his leg.


Kromah is the first Liberian journalist to fall prey to the disease. The PUL in a short statement said it is very deeply saddened by the news. Secretary General D. Kaihenneh Sengbeh said.

“This shows that Ebola has no boundary and all Liberians must collaborate to fight the invisible enemy that is tearing the country apart. Our deepest sympathy to the rest of the family and may his soul and all those departed rest in perfect peace.”

‘No (Ebola) Symptoms’: Associate Justice Yuoh in Good Spirits

Monrovia – An Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Liberia, Hon. Sieanyene G. Yuoh says she’s in good spirits and showing no signs of the Ebola virus as is being widely speculated in Monrovia.
Thousands of people have defied Sierra Leone’s three-day lockdown to combat the Ebola virus by crossing the border into Guinea without going through health controls.
Health officials in Guinea said people were coming “in waves” through the bush, fearing they would be taken away if they were found to have the diseasehttp://www.euronews.com/2014/09/20/thousands-evade-ebola-lockdown-in-sierra-leone/

Killing of an anti-Ebola team in Guinea: a survivor testified: "I've seen people get away with machetes and slingshots"


Protesters N'zérékoré Advocacy against Ebola turned tragic Tuesday, September 16 in the small town of Wome in Forest Guinea. Doctors, politicians and journalists were lynched by residents who refused to admit the existence of the virus. A survivor testifies ...
Tuesday afternoon, a delegation of a dozen people went to Womé, sub-prefecture of the region N'zérékoré in south-western Guinea Conakry. Among them, representatives of health staff of the hospital N'zérékoré, pastor, representatives of the Guinean state and several journalists covering the operation. The purpose of the delegation about the risks of the spread of the Ebola virus in a region that is experiencing a resurgence of epidemics in the past two weeks .
"When we arrived at Womé, we were welcomed by the population. The governor of the region Nzerekore first made a speech in French to express the determination of Guinea to defeat Ebola virus. Then an interpreter translated his words in the local language to the crowd. After a few minutes, someone stood up and said in the local language: "It is you who bring us Ebola! You're going to give up "and there was a clamor. The authorities have tried to speak again to calm people. But immediately, we received a hail of stones. I've seen people get away with machetes and slingshots. All members of the delegation took their legs around their necks to escape. It was every man for himself: some managed to escape with their vehicles, they are not concerned about me [vehicles were stoned before she managed to escape, including that of the governor and the prefect, note] . I was scared, and I ran as far as I could to hide in a bush. It was very long hours of anguish waiting, staring at my cell phone, looking network to prevent my family. In the middle of the night, I managed to send a text message to tell them that he had taken something serious to Womé, but I was alive. I told them where I was hiding. They managed to pick me up and I'm back healthy and saves Wednesday Nzerekore.
Behind me, I left friends, unable to help. Those who attacked the delegation made no distinction between doctors, journalists or political: for them, we had all come to contaminate them. "
Cynthia actually escaped the worst: Thursday, September 18, the Guinean authorities alerted to the seriousness of the event have found seven dead bodies in a mass grave, some of which have wounds with machetes. Among them are the sub-prefect of Wome, the head of the regional health and three journalists. 21 people were injured and two people are still missing.

"Texting say Ebola is an invention of the Guinean government"

Several cases of virulent opposition to raising awareness occurred in the area of ​​Forest Guinea in recent weeks, but this is the first time a rebellion of the population is dead. Jeudi18 September, Guinean Prime Minister condemned "in the strongest [this] act of cruelty intolerable and unjustifiable" and announced the opening of a police investigation. Six people have already been arrested.
Nixon (pseudonym) knew a trainee journalists of a local radio who was killed while covering the event.
"There was no indication that this could be down to Womé dangerous: it is not a village at risk. It was however the first time since the Ebola a delegation went there to call the population to be vigilant because of the upsurge of cases in the region [of awareness epidemic had already taken place but from religious bodies, ed]. The problem is that misinformation is in full swing in the region for several weeks, SMS circulating on mobile phones to say that Ebola is an invention of the Guinean government to decimate the population of Guinea forest. The people in these rural areas have no confidence at all in the political representatives. "

The funeral of the victims of the forest Womay May 1 N'zérékoré, in pictures ...


As announced in a previous dispatch, our fellow physicians and coldly murdered by the "anti Ebola" journalists womey finally reached their final resting place this afternoon (17 hours) in the forest of May 1, at the entrance of the town near the governorate ...
Previously, these compatriots had been abused until death ensues, buried and dug up another mass grave of primary school womey before sharing the final resting place in the woods Nzerekore city, a forest which becomes increasingly the home of the victims of injustice and horrible death when we know that she had also received other victims, including massacres intercommunity 2013 ...
Guineematin.com offers, below are some pictures of the funeral, thanks to one of our contacts N'zérékoré Hassimiou Sow:

Seven of the victims of womey buried in a mass grave in the forest of May 1: at the entrance of the city of N'zérékoré


N This is 17 hours as 'martyrs Ebola' finished their last trip to this world! Atrociously killed, some mutilated and others burnt down, they dug up the body of the mass grave of their tormentors womey could not expect too much at the district hospital, and could not be returned to their families, already sufficiently tested for both losses cruel and surprising as bestiality in which their lives were cut short! Only the body of the pastor was removed and given to his church ...
"You hear the sound of the tractor? It is putting the land on them ... "said the phone Guineematin.com Hassimiou Sow, who was in the crowd of attendants.
After announcing five (5) body, Mr. Sow recalled to clarify that after checking, there has seven bodies that share the pit, adding that some bodies were packed in the same bag, "You know that some were beheaded ... "says our informant with details ...
When the pastor, "he is buried at once in Zao," says another source to Guineemtin.com contacted at 5:46 p.m..
Guineematin.com extends its heartfelt condolences to the families, relatives, friends and acquaintances different victims and all the people of Guinea.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Liberian Executive Protection Service -57 Agents Quarantined #ebola

Ebola Strikes EPS - 57 Agents Quarantined

As the Ebola virus continues to spread throughout the country like wildfire, the elite presidential guard- the Executive Protection Service, formerly the Special Security Service is the latest hit by the deadly disease.
57 of its officers and agents are currently being quarantined on suspicion of contracting the virus. Information gathered by this paper point to the fact the active EPS agents were being quarantined for attending the funeral and burial of a colleague reportedly died as a result of the deadly virus.

According to a document in the possession of this paper under the directive of the Director of the Presidential elite force-EPS, Col.  Frank O. Nyekan, the 57 agents were asked to stay off the job for 21 days for participating in the funeral of Agent Ballah O. Dennis, who finally died on August 15, 2014.

A citation, under the signature of Agent Joseph Kollie, supervisor of the Human Resource Section of the EPS, issued on September 15, 2014, states: “by directive of the administration, through Director Frank O. Nyekan, the below listed employees of the EPS are hereby instructed to report to the office of the professional standard to state the role they played during the funeral service and burial of the late Agent Ballah O. Dennis,” the citation instructed.

The two page-citation further stated: “In the same vein, they are hereby advised to stay away from work until the Professional Standard Section comes up with analytical report and recommendations relative to their roles played during the funeral service and burial of the late agent. Let this administrative instruction claim your attention and act accordingly to avoid future embarrassment,” it warned. Agent Dennis was assigned with the presidential motorcade prior to his demised at the “hands of Ebola”.

According to our sources, the late Agent Dennis, along with other family members, accompanied for medication an ailing relative (named not revealed) to several hospitals in Monrovia, including the SDA Cooper, SOS, ELWA, and government- run John F. Kennedy Medical Center, but was rejected on the basis of his condition.

Later at the Goodwill Clinic in Fiamah, SDinkor, where they thought there would have been little hope, the patient was denied acceptance because medical practitioners at the clinic observed serious symptoms of the Ebola virus disease. The Ailing EPS Agent was later taken back to his residence in the Tulsa Field Community Gardinersville, outside Monrovia where he finally died.

When Presidential Spokesman Jerolinmek  Piah was contacted via mobile phone Wednesday afternoon, he declined to comment on grounds that he only speaks for the president’s office and not the Executive Protection Service. When the Director of the EPS, Col. Frank O. Nyekan was finally contacted via mobile phone, he told this paper that he was in a meeting and could not speak to the issue.   

However, it is unclear as to whether the Late Agent Ballah O. Dennis closely and personally interacted with President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf in recent times prior to death as a member of the Presidential motorcade.
http://www.thenewdawnliberia.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12704:ebola-strikes-eps-57-agents-quarantined&catid=25:politics&Itemid=59

For Fear of Ebola Spread House Quarantines Several


By: 
Keith Morris
Following the death of Captain James Morlu of the House of Representatives, the Lower House yesterday decided to “quarantine those suspected of having had contact with Morlu.”
Capt. Morlu recently died after a brief illness, but the cause of death is yet to be established.
According to Deputy House Speaker Hans Barchue, the House leadership agreed to place Sergeant-At-Arms General Martine Johnson and the entire security detachment controlling the chambers of the House chamber under quarantine until the end of September 2014.
At a news conference in Monrovia, Rep. Barchue disclosed that a specimen of Morlu had been extracted for laboratory testing and the results will be available in days; but the leadership has imposed precautionary measures on the House family of the victim, in order to protect and prevent a possible spread.
“We were made to understand that Morlu had been away from the Capitol Building since August 28, 2014.  However, we want to be extra careful not infest others even though we do not yet know what killed him. We reported this to the World Health Organization people and they are in contact with his family and staffers as well.
“We asked the Chief Clerk,  Madam Mildred Siryon, to speak with the Ministry of Health in order to make food available to the families and the quarantined staffers during this period,” Deputy Speaker Barchue stated.
The House announced that regular Extra Session as required by the Constitution under a State of Emergency was scheduled to have resumed yesterday,  September 18, 2014 in order to run the affairs of state.
The House on Monday of this week suspended its Extraordinary Sitting for Tuesday, September 16, 2014 over the fear of Ebola.
According to the Grand Bassa County lawmaker, suspending sessions was based to medical advice from experts in an effort to chlorinate and disinfest the House’s chamber and surrounding offices due to a probable case of Ebola.
Members and chamber staff were asked to stay away during and 48 hours after the chlorination.
Meanwhile, since the pronouncement was made by the House, the entire Capitol Building has been  deserted by officials of government, including Vice President Joseph N. Boakai and Speaker Alex Tyler, whose offices are located within the building.
Morlu served as one of the leading security officers who was usually involved with distributing or circulating the chamber’s agenda, as well as, procuring some personal items for lawmakers during session.

Ebola Kills 10 in 48hrs in Ganta

Ebola Kills 10 in 48hrs in Ganta

Health workers dressed in their hazmat suits had gone to remove dead and chlorinate the homes

Ebola Kills 10 in 48hrs in Ganta

By: 
Ishmael F. Menkor
The Ebola virus has exploded in Ganta again leading to the death of at least 10 persons within 48 hours. This has exacerbated the existing fear already in the Nimba County city, which used to be bustling before the outbreak.
This wave of death is one of the heaviest in Ganta since the outbreak of Ebola began raging across Liberia.
Early Wednesday morning some residents gathered at the Ganta City Mayor Office demanding the removal of dead bodies from their community.
Some of the bodies are yet to be buried owing to the lack of vehicle to remove them. Some of the bodies had spent days in the community, creating anger in the citizens and sparking up their assembly at the city office for a quick response.
The Ganta Ebola Task Force has repeatedly been accused of responding slowly when it is called. There are reports that Ganta is an epicenter of the fight against the Ebola Virus Disease in Nimba.
“We are tired of carrying on awareness in the community, because those who are sick cannot be treated on time and some remain sick and died without anyone responding to them,” said Janjay Cole, a resident in Ganta.
“People are tired of seeing us again and again in their communities, because not much is being done to cater to the needs of the sick,” he added.
The Ganta Task Force which is coordinating relief effort by reaching out to the sick and those under quarantine is said to have run out of cash and basic supplies, because citizens are no longer donating as it used to be in July to August.
Rev. Eleazar Gbengar, spokesperson for the Task Force said, “The community preferred reaching out to the sick themselves so they can be known instead of passing through the Task Force, and so we can’t do anything.”
The Task Force usually provides funding to procure medicine for first aid medication to those suspected of being sick until their condition is diagnosed by health workers and taken to Monrovia for treatment, but shortage of money is hampering the medical response team as well as the welfare team.
Nimba County with close to half a million population is yet to receive testing or treatment center since the outbreak of the EVD.
Economic activity in Ganta is gradually declining with some key businesses including building material seller “Sethi Brothers” among others closing and leaving.
“We are just living by the grace of God, because we don’t know where we are heading in this Ebola crisis, no more daily markets, prices of basic commodities continue to rise,” said a lady with six children.
Amidst this deplorable condition, concerns are still raised as to what government is doing to treat those who had come down with the virus so as to save life when there  are no enough ambulances in county to reach everywhere for sick people.
“This county has two second handed ambulances and are presently in one garage in Yekapa, how can we respond  quickly to pick the sick,: said a health practitioner who doesn’t want to be named.

Double Death

Double Death

Miss Liberia 2009-2010, Shu-rina Rose Weah about 2 weeks after the death of her elder sister, Toose Sieanyene Yuoh

Double Death

Friends and family remember the former Miss Liberia and her elder sister who both died 2 weeks apart
By: 
Makanfi Kamara
Miss Liberia 2009-2010, Shu-rina Rose Weah was reported dead on Tuesday, September 16, just a fortnight after the death of her elder sister, Toose Sieanyene Yuoh.  The cause of death of either sister is not yet confirmed, although friends who posted condolences on Wiah’s Facebook page are desperately seeking answers to this very question.  Other sources suggest Wiah had been sickly over the past year, and that the cause of death might not be Ebola.
Ms. Weah, who hails from Grand Bassa County, studied Public Administration & Management at the African Methodist Episcopal University in Monrovia, Liberia.  She was the founder and executive director of “New Hope for Young Women," an organization that focuses on encouraging young and single mothers without support, and helping them to obtain a better education.  She died at age 27.
Toose Yuoh, Shu-rina’s elder sister, posted on her facebook page that she (Toose) was married on May 7, 2014 and died four months later, on September 1..  http://www.liberianobserver.com/lib-life/double-death

8 Dead Bodies Found In Ganta…Ebola Kills 2 Ambulance Drivers


By Solomon Gaye In Nimba County
Eight dead bodies have been discovered in Ganta, Nimba County as authorities of the county continue to combat the deadly Ebola.
The INQUIRER gathered that in Ganta, two of the dead bodies were found at the Palm Community in Deakehmehn while the balance six were found in various communities in and around Ganta, a commercial city in the county.
At the Ganta City Corporation Hall, a spokesman of the Ebola Task Force in the area said the eight dead bodies may have died from Ebola or related cases.
Information closed to the Ebola Task Force in the county indicated that the eight bodies died during the weekend in Ganta and the bodies were taken over by the Ebola burial team for interment.
In a related development, two Ambulance drivers working for the Ministry of Health and assigned in Nimba County have died.
The two drivers, Victor Naiyee, and Oliver Kough died one week ago in Nimba after contracting the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD)
.
Oliver Kough was assigned at the J.W. Harley Hospital in Sanniquellie while Victor Naiyee was assigned with the Saclepea Comprehensive Health Center in Saclepea, Nimba County.

A sister of Oliver Kough, Kama Kough said, the death of her brother derived from the ambulance that he was driving which was always transporting Ebola patients. She said Oliver Kough left behind several children including his wife and a host of other relatives.
When contacted, the Medical Director at the J. W. Harley Hospital, Dr. Laurine Cooper refused to comment on the issue and said she was not clothed with the authority to speak to the press.
According to report gathered by this paper the two drivers died after contracting the Ebola virus while on duty.Olive Kough died at the holding center in Monrovia, while Victor Naiyee died at the Comprehensive Health Center in Saclepea.
The Osun State Government has directed all public and and private Schools in the State to reopen for the year 2014/2015 academic activities on Monday, October 6, 2014.

The announcement comes as the Federal Government and the Nigeria Union Of Teachers (NUT) continue talks on whether or not to resume on September 22, the schools resumption date set by the Federal Ministry of Education.

A statement signed by the Deputy Governor, Otunba Grace Titi Laoye-Tomori, who doubles as the Commissioner for Education, said that this would enable both principals and teachers to receive adequate training and put in place all necessary measures to prevent the Ebola epidemic in schools and in the state in general.

She assured the people of the State that Osun is Ebola free. She called on school managers to ensure daily practical demonstration of hand washing by the pupils and students, including teachers.

She emphasized the need to maintain the culture of hygiene.

Sierra Leone News: Philanthropist rescues quarantined homes in Marampa


Sierra Leone News: Philanthropist rescues quarantined homes in Marampa

More than 50 residents of Marampa Chiefdom in Port Loko District are currently facing an Ebola crisis, following the quarantining of an entire Magbethor village and four houses in the township of Lunsar.
Circumstances leading to the quarantining of Magbethor Village; a remote locality situated a few kilometres off Masiaka-Makeni highway in the north of Sierra Leone, followed the mysterious death of what could be referred to as the first Ebola victim in a tiny village comprising ten houses.


Five days after the death of Pa Musa Kamara (the first victim), a stream of deaths in less than eight days followed, which included ten other members of his family. Two of such deaths, according to report, took place in Kenema, where contact tracers (following proof that they were Ebola positive) had transferred all suspected cases for treatment.
As a result of these deaths, a decision to quarantine the entire village and four other houses in Lunsar that had suffered similar circumstance, was arrived at; with apparently no sober plan to provide food supply for those homes.


In the midst of this food crisis among quarantine families; who are approximately more than 40, Khadija Bah-Wakefield, a social scientist cum policy adviser, and an indigene of Marampa Chiefdom, has provided a total of 14 bags of rice, including cooking ingredients and nutritional support to all the quarantined homes across the chiefdom.

The Philanthropist, as being referred to by beneficiaries, said that she actually made the donation as part of her support to the government’s fight against the deadly Ebola outbreak, and to show compassion and care for his people, who she considered “ vulnerable.” She revealed that having grown up in the chiefdom, she would want to give back especially in a trying moment like this in the country. She urged all to come on-board and challenge the disease, as, she suggested, it is only through cohesive approach that the fight against Ebola will be won.
The Chief of the village, Pa Santigie Koroma lamented that since the time the village was cordoned off, no serious attention particularly in the area of food supply has been rendered to them.
He explained that they as inhabitants are very much disappointed with authorities of the chiefdom, as, he alleged, none of them have paid a single visit to them from the date the order to quarantine them came.
He expressed profound thanks to the Khadija Bah-Wakefield for her kind support in providing the most needed items to them at such a crucial moment. He said that their situation in the village is pathetic, as farming activities have been seriously jeopardized. He said that as rules of quarantine demands, they are not allowed to visit their farms. As a result, birds and rodents are presently feasting on their rice and crops with utmost liberty.
He made a call on authorities to provide needed life-support items to them in such a moment of grief.
Three officers from the Operational Support Division (OSD) complained that they are equally vulnerable in their execution of duty, as they are presently dwelling in the home of late Pa Musa Kamara who presumably died of Ebola.
However, it was reported that health workers visit the village every morning to know the health status of inhabitants.

By Poindexter Sama
Thursday September 18, 2014

Sierra Leone to ‘Close Down’ Over Ebola Containment Measure

...after 3 days everyone back to drinkin, screwin and dyin...

Sierra Leone's president Ernest Bai Koroma (L) is handed the keys to an ambulance by U.S. Embassy representative Kathleen FitzGibbon (C), one of five ambulances donated by the U.S., in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Sept. 10, 2014.
Sierra Leone's president Ernest Bai Koroma (L) is handed the keys to an ambulance by U.S. Embassy representative Kathleen FitzGibbon (C), one of five ambulances donated by the U.S., in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Sept. 10, 2014.

Peter Clottey
Sierra Leone will “close down” the country for three days beginning on Friday as part of the government’s effort to contain and eradicate the deadly Ebola virus infection from exponentially spreading in the West African nation, according to information minister Alpha Kanu.
Current figures show there are 1,400 cases of the Ebola disease in Sierra Leone, according to Kanu.
He said the administration aims to reduce the infection rate.
“Everybody is expected to stay at home except about 50,000 or so essential staff people who will be given passes to move around the country. That does not include the 21,000 youths, who are volunteering to go from house to house to talk to people, [and] educate them about the dangers of the disease, the nature of the disease and how it can be prevented,” said Kanu.
He said the containment measure will focus on suspending the country’s age-old cultural practices, including greetings and funeral arrangements.
“[Volunteers] will talk to them about improving their personal hygiene and also putting in abeyance highly valued cultural activities of touching and feeling each other- shaking hands, hugging and also trying to cut down on our traditional rights of burial, where people have to wash dead bodies before they are buried,” said Kanu.
Kanu said President Ernest Bai Koroma has established two commissions, which he said are being backed by international medical partners, to oversee the Ebola containment measure.
Kanu expressed confidence the measure will succeed.
“We are very encouraged and hopeful that the outcome would be positive in the sense that if you limit the person-to-person contact and the area-to-area movements of people, we can limit the disease and its transmission. Once we do that we cut the transmission rate, we will be in a position to care better for those who are already infected,” he said... http://www.voanews.com/content/sierra-leone-to-clode-down-over-ebola-containment-measure/2454663.html

Ebola Health Workers: Attack Leaves 3 Journalists, 2 Doctors Dead

Ebola Health Workers: Attack Leaves 3 Journalists, 2 Doctors Dead

Eight people were found dead Thursday after an attack on a team conducting an information session on Ebola in Guinea, Reuters reported. Three of the bodies had their throats slit, government spokesperson Damantang Albert Camara told Reuters.
"The eight bodies were found in the village latrine," Camara told Reuters.
Three journalists, the director of the health education program in the town and two senior doctors who work at the local hospital were among the dead. Angry residents of Womey, a small town in southeastern Guinea, attacked the health workers Tuesday, then reportedly held them captive before they were found dead.
"The meeting started off well; the traditional chiefs welcomed the delegation with 10 kola nuts as a traditional greeting," a local resident who said his name is Yves told the Guardian. "It was afterwards that some youths came out and started stoning them. They dragged some of them away, and damaged their vehicles."
There is wide mistrust in the smaller towns of Guinea, one of the three countries that have been hardest hit by the recent Ebola outbreak that health officials are calling the deadliest in history. Villagers have accused foreign doctors of “bringing the disease” with them, Dr. Michel Van Herp of Doctors Without Borders told ABC news. Some villagers believe that uttering the word Ebola out loud causes the disease to spread and others believe it simply does not exist, Van Herp said...  http://www.ibtimes.com/ebola-health-workers-attack-leaves-3-journalists-2-doctors-dead-1691560

Ebola Riots in Guinea Leave Seven Dead, Premier Says


Sep 18, 2014 5:27 PM ETSeven people were killed during rioting in Guinea as members of a mission seeking to educate the population about the Ebola virus were attacked by angry crowds, the West African nation’s premier said.
Those killed in the clashes yesterday in the southern N’Zerekore region included an evangelical pastor, Prime Minister Mohamed Said Fofana said in a televised address today. The delegation was seeking to raise awareness about the deadly viral disease, and encountered a “hostile reaction of citizens who continue to believe that Ebola does not exist, or that it was created to eliminate them,” he said.
Guinea, along with Sierra Leone and Liberia, is among the worst-hit countries in the Ebola epidemic, the worst outbreak of the disease in history. About half of the 5,000 people who’ve been infected have died, and the World Health Organization has warned that the infections may not have peaked. The U.S. is deploying about 3,000 soldiers to West Africa to help efforts against the virus.
Emmanuel Camara, a witness who attended the meeting in the village of Wome that led to the rioting, said the team led by the region’s governor was explaining how to prevent Ebola and avoid contact with suspected cases. Suddenly, a group of young people accused the delegation of spreading the disease in the village, Camara, who fled with his family to escape the violence, said by phone today.
“They attacked with stones and sticks,” he said.
Fofana said two members of the delegation remain missing, while six people have been arrested in connection with the attack. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-18/ebola-riots-in-guinea-leave-seven-dead-premier-says.html

COMMENTARY: Health workers need optimal respiratory protection for Ebola

COMMENTARY: Health workers need optimal respiratory protection for Ebola


Editor's Note: Today's commentary was submitted to CIDRAP by the authors, who are national experts on respiratory protection and infectious disease transmission. In May they published a similar commentary on MERS-CoV. Dr Brosseau is a Professor and Dr Jones an Assistant Professor in the School of Public Health, Division of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, at the University of Illinois at Chicago.


Healthcare workers play a very important role in the successful containment of outbreaks of infectious diseases like Ebola. The correct type and level of personal protective equipment (PPE) ensures that healthcare workers remain healthy throughout an outbreak—and with the current rapidly expanding Ebola outbreak in West Africa, it's imperative to favor more conservative measures.
 
The precautionary principle—that any action designed to reduce risk should not await scientific certainty—compels the use of respiratory protection for a pathogen like Ebola virus that has:
 
  • No proven pre- or post-exposure treatment modalities
  • A high case-fatality rate
  • Unclear modes of transmission
We believe there is scientific and epidemiologic evidence that Ebola virus has the potential to be transmitted via infectious aerosol particles both near and at a distance from infected patients, which means that healthcare workers should be wearing respirators, not facemasks.1
The minimum level of protection in high-risk settings should be a respirator with an assigned protection factor greater than 10. A powered air-purifying respirator (PAPR) with a hood or helmet offers many advantages over an N95 filtering facepiece or similar respirator, being more protective, comfortable, and cost-effective in the long run.
We strongly urge the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO) to seek funds for the purchase and transport of PAPRs to all healthcare workers currently fighting the battle against Ebola throughout Africa—and beyond.
There has been a lot of on-line and published controversy about whether Ebola virus can be transmitted via aerosols. Most scientific and medical personnel, along with public health organizations, have been unequivocal in their statements that Ebola can be transmitted only by direct contact with virus-laden fluids2,3 and that the only modes of transmission we should be concerned with are those termed "droplet" and "contact."
These statements are based on two lines of reasoning. The first is that no one located at a distance from an infected individual has contracted the disease, or the converse, every person infected has had (or must have had) "direct" contact with the body fluids of an infected person.
This reflects an incorrect and outmoded understanding of infectious aerosols, which has been institutionalized in policies, language, culture, and approaches to infection control. We will address this below. Briefly, however, the important points are that virus-laden bodily fluids may be aerosolized and inhaled while a person is in proximity to an infectious person and that a wide range of particle sizes can be inhaled and deposited throughout the respiratory tract.
The second line of reasoning is that respirators or other control measures for infectious aerosols cannot be recommended in developing countries because the resources, time, and/or understanding for such measures are lacking.4
Although there are some important barriers to the use of respirators, especially PAPRs, in developing countries, healthcare workers everywhere deserve and should be afforded the same best-practice types of protection, regardless of costs and resources. Every healthcare worker is a precious commodity whose well-being ensures everyone is protected.
If we are willing to offer infected US healthcare workers expensive treatments and experimental drugs free of charge when most of the world has no access to them, we wonder why we are unwilling to find the resources to provide appropriate levels of comparatively less expensive respiratory protection to every healthcare worker around the world.

How are infectious diseases transmitted via aerosols?

Medical and infection control professionals have relied for years on a paradigm for aerosol transmission of infectious diseases based on very outmoded research and an overly simplistic interpretation of the data. In the 1940s and 50s, William F. Wells and other "aerobiologists" employed now significantly out-of-date sampling methods (eg, settling plates) and very blunt analytic approaches (eg, cell culturing) to understand the movement of bacterial aerosols in healthcare and other settings. Their work, though groundbreaking at the time, provides a very incomplete picture.
Early aerobiologists were not able to measure small particles near an infectious person and thus assumed such particles existed only far from the source. They concluded that organisms capable of aerosol transmission (termed "airborne") can only do so at around 3 feet or more from the source. Because they thought that only larger particles would be present near the source, they believed people would be exposed only via large "droplets" on their face, eyes, or nose.
Modern research, using more sensitive instruments and analytic methods, has shown that aerosols emitted from the respiratory tract contain a wide distribution of particle sizes—including many that are small enough to be inhaled.5,6 Thus, both small and large particles will be present near an infectious person.
The chance of large droplets reaching the facial mucous membranes is quite small, as the nasal openings are small and shielded by their external and internal structure. Although close contact may permit large-droplet exposure, it also maximizes the possibility of aerosol inhalation.
As noted by early aerobiologists, liquid in a spray aerosol, such as that generated during coughing or sneezing, will quickly evaporate,7 which increases the concentration of small particles in the aerosol. Because evaporation occurs in milliseconds, many of these particles are likely to be found near the infectious person.

The current paradigm also assumes that only "small" particles (less than 5 micrometers [mcm]) can be inhaled and deposited in the respiratory tract. This is not true. Particles as large as 100 mcm (and perhaps even larger) can be inhaled into the mouth and nose. Larger particles are deposited in the nasal passages, pharynx, and upper regions of the lungs, while smaller particles are more likely to deposit in the lower, alveolar regions. And for many pathogens, infection is possible regardless of the particle size or deposition site.

It's time to abandon the old paradigm of three mutually exclusive transmission routes for a new one that considers the full range of particle sizes both near and far from a source. In addition, we need to factor in other important features of infectivity, such as the ability of a pathogen to remain viable in air at room temperature and humidity and the likelihood that systemic disease can result from deposition of infectious particles in the respiratory system or their transfer to the gastrointestinal tract.
We recommend using "aerosol transmissible" rather than the outmoded terms "droplet" or "airborne" to describe pathogens that can transmit disease via infectious particles suspended in air.

Is Ebola an aerosol-transmissible disease?

We recently published a commentary on the CIDRAP site discussing whether Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) could be an aerosol-transmissible disease, especially in healthcare settings. We drew comparisons with a similar and more well-studied disease, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
For Ebola and other filoviruses, however, there is much less information and research on disease transmission and survival, especially in healthcare settings.
Being at first skeptical that Ebola virus could be an aerosol-transmissible disease, we are now persuaded by a review of experimental and epidemiologic data that this might be an important feature of disease transmission, particularly in healthcare settings.

What do we know about Ebola transmission?

No one knows for certain how Ebola virus is transmitted from one person to the next. The virus has been found in the saliva, stool, breast milk, semen, and blood of infected persons.8,9 Studies of transmission in Ebola virus outbreaks have identified activities like caring for an infected person, sharing a bed, funeral activities, and contact with blood or other body fluids to be key risk factors for transmission.10-12
On the basis of epidemiologic evidence, it has been presumed that Ebola viruses are transmitted by contaminated hands in contact with the mouth or eyes or broken skin or by splashes or sprays of body fluids into these areas. Ebola viruses appear to be capable of initiating infection in a variety of human cell types,13,14 but the primary portal or portals of entry into susceptible hosts have not been identified.
Some pathogens are limited in the cell type and location they infect. Influenza, for example, is generally restricted to respiratory epithelial cells, which explains why flu is primarily a respiratory infection and is most likely aerosol transmissible. HIV infects T-helper cells in the lymphoid tissues and is primarily a bloodborne pathogen with low probability for transmission via aerosols.
Ebola virus, on the other hand, is a broader-acting and more non-specific pathogen that can impede the proper functioning of macrophages and dendritic cells—immune response cells located throughout the epithelium.15,16 Epithelial tissues are found throughout the body, including in the respiratory tract. Ebola prevents these cells from carrying out their antiviral functions but does not interfere with the initial inflammatory response, which attracts additional cells to the infection site. The latter contribute to further dissemination of the virus and similar adverse consequences far beyond the initial infection site.

The potential for transmission via inhalation of aerosols, therefore, cannot be ruled out by the observed risk factors or our knowledge of the infection process. Many body fluids, such as vomit, diarrhea, blood, and saliva, are capable of creating inhalable aerosol particles in the immediate vicinity of an infected person. Cough was identified among some cases in a 1995 outbreak in Kikwit, Democratic Republic of the Congo,11 and coughs are known to emit viruses in respirable particles.17 The act of vomiting produces an aerosol and has been implicated in airborne transmission of gastrointestinal viruses.18,19 Regarding diarrhea, even when contained by toilets, toilet flushing emits a pathogen-laden aerosol that disperses in the air.20-22
Experimental work has shown that Marburg and Ebola viruses can be isolated from sera and tissue culture medium at room temperature for up to 46 days, but at room temperature no virus was recovered from glass, metal, or plastic surfaces.23 Aerosolized (1-3 mcm) Marburg, Ebola, and Reston viruses, at 50% to 55% relative humidity and 72°F, had biological decay rates of 3.04%, 3.06%. and 1.55% per minute, respectively. These rates indicate that 99% loss in aerosol infectivity would occur in 93, 104, and 162 minutes, respectively.23
In still air, 3-mcm particles can take up to an hour to settle. With air currents, these and smaller particles can be transported considerable distances before they are deposited on a surface.

There is also some experimental evidence that Ebola and other filoviruses can be transmitted by the aerosol route. Jaax et al24 reported the unexpected death of two rhesus monkeys housed approximately 3 meters from monkeys infected with Ebola virus, concluding that respiratory or eye exposure to aerosols was the only possible explanation.
Zaire Ebola viruses have also been transmitted in the absence of direct contact among pigs25 and from pigs to non-human primates,26 which experienced lung involvement in infection. Persons with no known direct contact with Ebola virus disease patients or their bodily fluids have become infected.12
Direct injection and exposure via a skin break or mucous membranes are the most efficient ways for Ebola to transmit. It may be that inhalation is a less efficient route of transmission for Ebola and other filoviruses, as lung involvement has not been reported in all non-human primate studies of Ebola aerosol infectivity.27 However, the respiratory and gastrointestinal systems are not complete barriers to Ebola virus. Experimental studies have demonstrated that it is possible to infect non-human primates and other mammals with filovirus aerosols.25-27

Altogether, these epidemiologic and experimental data offer enough evidence to suggest that Ebola and other filoviruses may be opportunistic with respect to aerosol transmission.28 That is, other routes of entry may be more important and probable, but, given the right conditions, it is possible that transmission could also occur via aerosols.
Guidance from the CDC and WHO recommends the use of facemasks for healthcare workers providing routine care to patients with Ebola virus disease and respirators when aerosol-generating procedures are performed. (Interestingly, the 1998 WHO and CDC infection-control guidance for viral hemorrhagic fevers in Africa, still available on the CDC Web site, recommends the use of respirators.)
Facemasks, however, do not offer protection against inhalation of small infectious aerosols, because they lack adequate filters and do not fit tightly against the face.1 Therefore, a higher level of protection is necessary.

Which respirator to wear?

As described in our earlier CIDRAP commentary, we can use a Canadian control-banding approach to select the most appropriate respirator for exposures to Ebola in healthcare settings.29 (See this document for a detailed description of the Canadian control banding approach and the data used to select respirators in our examples below.)
The control banding method involves the following steps:
  1. Identify the organism's risk group (1 to 4). Risk group reflects the toxicity of an organism, including the degree and type of disease and whether treatments are available. Ebola is in risk group 4, the most toxic organisms, because it can cause serious human or animal disease, is easily transmitted, directly or indirectly, and currently has no effective treatments or preventive measures.
  2. Identify the generation rate. The rate of aerosol generation reflects the number of particles created per time (eg, particles per second). Some processes, such as coughing, create more aerosols than others, like normal breathing. Some processes, like intubation and toilet flushing, can rapidly generate very large quantities of aerosols. The control banding approach assigns a qualitative rank ranging from low (1) to high (4) (eg, normal breathing without coughing has a rank of 1).
  3. Identify the level of control. Removing contaminated air and replacing it with clean air, as accomplished with a ventilation system, is effective for lowering the overall concentration of infectious aerosol particles in a space, although it may not be effective at lowering concentration in the immediate vicinity of a source. The number of air changes per hour (ACH) reflects the rate of air removal and replacement. This is a useful variable, because it is relatively easy to measure and, for hospitals, reflects building code requirements for different types of rooms. Again, a qualitative ranking is used to reflect low (1) versus high (4) ACH. Even if the true ventilation rate is not known, the examples can be used to select an appropriate air exchange rate.
  4. Identify the respirator assigned protection factor. Respirators are designated by their "class," each of which has an assigned protection factor (APF) that reflects the degree of protection. The APF represents the outside, environmental concentration divided by the inside, facepiece concentration. An APF of 10 means that the outside concentration of a particular contaminant will be 10 times greater than that inside the respirator. If the concentration outside the respirator is very high, an assigned protection factor of 10 may not prevent the wearer from inhaling an infective dose of a highly toxic organism.

Practical examples

Two examples follow. These assume that infectious aerosols are generated only during vomiting, diarrhea, coughing, sneezing, or similar high-energy emissions such as some medical procedures. It is possible that Ebola virus may be shed as an aerosol in other manners not considered.
Caring for a patient in the early stages of disease (no bleeding, vomiting, diarrhea, coughing, sneezing, etc). In this case, the generation rate is 1. For any level of control (less than 3 to more than 12 ACH), the control banding wheel indicates a respirator protection level of 1 (APF of 10), which corresponds to an air purifying (negative pressure) half-facepiece respirator such as an N95 filtering facepiece respirator. This type of respirator requires fit testing.
Caring for a patient in the later stages of disease (bleeding, vomiting, diarrhea, etc). If we assume the highest generation rate (4) and a standard patient room (control level = 2, 3-6 ACH), a respirator with an APF of at least 50 is needed. In the United States, this would be equivalent to either a full-facepiece air-purifying (negative-pressure) respirator or a half-facepiece PAPR (positive pressure), but standards differ in other countries. Fit testing is required for these types of respirators.
The control level (room ventilation) can have a big effect on respirator selection. For the same patient housed in a negative-pressure airborne infection isolation room (6-12 ACH), a respirator with an assigned protection factor of 25 is required. This would correspond in the United States to a PAPR with a loose-fitting facepiece or with a helmet or hood. This type of respirator does not need fit testing.

Implications for protecting health workers in Africa

Healthcare workers have experienced very high rates of morbidity and mortality in the past and current Ebola virus outbreaks. A facemask, or surgical mask, offers no or very minimal protection from infectious aerosol particles. As our examples illustrate, for a risk group 4 organism like Ebola, the minimum level of protection should be an N95 filtering facepiece respirator.
This type of respirator, however, would only be appropriate only when the likelihood of aerosol exposure is very low.  
For healthcare workers caring for many patients in an epidemic situation, this type of respirator may not provide an adequate level of protection.
For a risk group 4 organism, any activity that has the potential for aerosolizing liquid body fluids, such as medical or disinfection procedures, should be avoided, if possible. Our risk assessment indicates that a PAPR with a full facepiece (APF = 50) or a hood or helmet (APF = 25) would be a better choice for patient care during epidemic conditions.
We recognize that PAPRs present some logistical and infection-control problems. Batteries require frequent charging (which requires a reliable source of electricity), and the entire ensemble requires careful handling and disinfection between uses. A PAPR is also more expensive to buy and maintain than other types of respirators.
On the other hand, a PAPR with a loose-fitting facepiece (hood or helmet) does not require fit testing. Wearing this type of respirator minimizes the need for other types of PPE, such as head coverings and goggles. And, most important, it is much more comfortable to wear than a negative-pressure respirator like an N95, especially in hot environments.
A recent report from a Medecins Sans Frontieres healthcare worker in Sierra Leone30 notes that healthcare workers cannot tolerate the required PPE for more than 40 minutes. Exiting the workplace every 40 minutes requires removal and disinfection or disposal (burning) of all PPE. A PAPR would allow much longer work periods, use less PPE, require fewer doffing episodes, generate less infectious waste, and be more protective. In the long run, we suspect this type of protection could also be less expensive.

Adequate protection is essential

To summarize, for the following reasons we believe that Ebola could be an opportunistic aerosol-transmissible disease requiring adequate respiratory protection:
  • Patients and procedures generate aerosols, and Ebola virus remains viable in aerosols for up to 90 minutes.
  • All sizes of aerosol particles are easily inhaled both near to and far from the patient.
  • Crowding, limited air exchange, and close interactions with patients all contribute to the probability that healthcare workers will be exposed to high concentrations of very toxic infectious aerosols.
  • Ebola targets immune response cells found in all epithelial tissues, including in the respiratory and gastrointestinal system.
  • Experimental data support aerosols as a mode of disease transmission in non-human primates.
Risk level and working conditions suggest that a PAPR will be more protective, cost-effective, and comfortable than an N95 filtering facepiece respirator.
Acknowledgements
We thank Kathleen Harriman, PhD, MPH, RN, Chief, Vaccine Preventable Diseases Epidemiology Section, Immunization Branch, California Department of Public Health, and Nicole Vars McCullough, PhD, CIH, Manager, Global Technical Services, Personal Safety Division, 3M Company, for their input and review.
References  http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2014/09/commentary-health-workers-need-optimal-respiratory-protection-ebola