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Thursday, 9 October 2014
WHO says no signs spread of Ebola is slowing
UN health authority says almost half of Ebola
patients in West Africa have died, and warns
disease could spread.
The Ebola outbreak shows no signs of abating,
has killed 3,879 people and threatens more
Western African nations poorly equipped to deal
with the disease, the World Health Organisation
has said in a report.
The UN's health authority said on Wednesday
that a total of 8,033 people had caught the
infection up to October 5, and 3,879 of those had
died. Liberia and Sierra Leone, the two worst-hit
nations, had less than a quarter of the beds
needed.
The news comes as the United States reported
that the first patient diagnosed of Ebola in the
country has died.
"The situation in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone
continues to deteriorate, with widespread and
persistent transmission of Ebola," the
organisation said. "There is no evidence that the
EVD epidemic in West Africa is being brought
under control."
It said a reported fall in the number of new cases
in Liberia was "unlikely to be genuine" and rather
reflected how responders were being
overwhelmed by data.
Meanwhile, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia's
president, said on Tuesday that international aid
to battle the Ebola epidemic was arriving too
slowly in her country.
"We just need to see a little bit faster action,
that's all. But certainly, in terms of resources both
human and financial as well as material, I think
the response is well appreciated and is very good.
We would like to speed it up," Sirleaf told the
Reuters news agency.
Striking workers
Burial workers ended a one-day strike in Sierra
Leone over unpaid wages, which left contagious
corpses of Ebola victims at homes and on the
streets of the capital, Freetown.
Health workers in Liberia have also threatened to
strike if their demands of a $700-a-month salary
and safety equipment were not met by the end
of the week.
US Secretary of State John Kerry meanwhile
issued an "urgent plea" to all nations to boost
their response to Ebola, as the US announced it
was sending 100 marines to Liberia.
"More countries can and must step up," Kerry
said, warning there were "still not enough
countries to be able to make a difference".
The World Bank estimated that the economic toll
of the largest Ebola outbreak in history could
reach $32.6bn if the disease continues to spread
through next year.
Jim Kim, the president of the World Bank, urged
western governments to back a new $20bn global
health fund that would be able to react instantly
to emergencies.
New cases
The Red Cross charity has confirmed that one of
its aid workers was under observation in Cairns
Hospital in Australia after returning last week
from working with people affected by the Ebola
virus in West Africa.
Meanwhile, the US confirmed the death of Ebola
patient Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian, who fell
ill shortly after arriving in the US on September
20. He had been isolated since September 28 and
died in a Dallas hospital.
Health officials have identified 10 people,
including seven health workers, who had direct
contact with Duncan while he was contagious.
Another 38 people may have also come into
contact with him.
His death comes two days after a Spanish nurse
was confirmed ill with the disease. She is believed
to have been infected while treating a Spanish
missionary who had been evacuated from Sierra
Leone.
The Madrid regional government said on
Wednesday that it put the nurse's dog to sleep
after the police retrieved it from the apartment
where Teresa Romero lived. Animal rights groups
sought to stop the authorities through an online
campaign to save the animal, but the officials
proceeded with the court order.
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