EBOLA MAIN EBOLA DISCUSSION THREAD 11/16/14 to 11/30/14

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/20/w...-liberia-is-hampered-by-infighting-.html?_r=0

Ebola Response in Liberia Is Hampered by Infighting

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.NOV. 19, 2014


The global response to the Ebola virus in Liberia is being hampered by poor coordination and serious disagreements between Liberian officials and the donors and health agencies fighting the epidemic, according to minutes of top-level meetings and interviews with participants.

Even now, three months after donors began pouring resources into Liberia, many confirmed cases still go unreported, countries refuse to change plans to erect field hospitals in the wrong places, families cannot find out whether their relatives in treatment are alive or dead, health workers sent to take temperatures sometimes lack thermometers, and bodies have been cremated because a larger cemetery was not yet open.

The detailed accounts of high-level meetings obtained by The New York Times, the most recent from Monday, lift the veil on the messy and contentious process of running the sprawling response to Liberia’s epidemic, one that now involves more than a hundred government agencies, charities and donors from around the world.

Despite these problems, with help from donors, Liberia, one of the three most afflicted West African countries, and the one with the highest death toll, has seen new cases drop to about 20 a day from about 100 a day two months ago. Experts attribute that to fearful Liberians touching one another less, more safe burials of bodies and distribution of protective gear to health care workers. But they also warn that cases are now holding steady and could explode again.

Participants in the meetings of the Incident Management System — which replaced the National Ebola Task Force — said the atmosphere in the meetings in the Liberian capital, Monrovia, should not be characterized as chaotic or bogged down in bickering, instead calling them “collegial” and “effective,” although one who spoke on condition of anonymity described “showmanship and political posturing.” Senior officials of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who attended — Dr. Frank J. Mahoney and Dr. Kevin M. De Cock — said in an email that there were “differences of opinion — accompanied by passionate discussions.”

At the meeting on Monday, Dr. De Cock cited serious logistics problems, including regular hospitals that cannot separate out Ebola patients, counties with no ambulances and temperature takers with no thermometers.

On Nov. 12, the representative of the United Nations secretary general complained that “hundreds” of vehicles had been made available but there was always a shortage. Asking where they are, he added: “The recipient also has to be accountable, just as the donor.”

Also, the support documents with the minutes indicate that there is no national plan for Ebola survivors — either for reuniting them with their families or for using them to do nursing tasks because they are thought to be immune.

A report on the issue reads: “The current and planned work presented by the partners and government for survivors can be characterized as fragmented and lacking in scope, scale, comprehensiveness, evidence base and survivor-driven programming.”

American military helicopters ferrying doctors to remote areas were forbidden to fly back not only patients but even blood samples; recently samples from a village had to be walked to a road four hours away. At Monday’s meeting, according to the minutes, Dr. De Cock called this “unacceptable,” adding, “This has to change this week.”

Dr. Hans Rosling, a Swedish epidemiologist and consultant to Liberia’s Health Ministry, said that the helicopter order came “from somewhere in America.” In an interview, he cited problems not listed in the minutes: one Asian and two European donor countries are insisting on building new Ebola field hospitals in Monrovia, where hospitals have empty beds, rather than in remote counties where beds are desperately needed; they insisted because they announced those plans two months ago, he said. The national case count was not reported for two days recently because the government employee compiling it went unpaid and stopped working. The minutes of the Incident Management System were made available along with PowerPoint files and other documents by an expert who said the disorganization of the Ebola effort should be made public.

The meetings are usually led by Tolbert Nyenswah, the deputy health minister, and include representatives from the Centers for Disease Control, the World Health Organization, the World Bank, the United Nations Mission for Ebola Emergency Response, numerous United Nations agencies, the United States Agency for International Development, the United States Army, Doctors Without Borders and medical, aid or military representatives from many other countries. Dr. Nyenswah and other ministry officials could not be reached for comment; Dr. Rosling has worked with the ministry since October.

The minutes make it clear that accuracy of the national case count is shaky.


Groups like Doctors Without Borders are reporting that they suddenly have far more beds than patients in West Africa, but it is unclear whether the Ebola epidemic is truly waning.
On Nov. 5, Dr. Rosling said, “We are absolutely sure that we cannot be sure about the data.”

In an interview, he said that to improve reporting of cases, he gave a $13,000 Swedish government grant to “a chronically honest church lady” to buy cellphone scratch cards for health officials in remote areas. The C.D.C. is bringing satellite phones to areas that lack cellular service.

Despite problems, he said, the response is going better than he had hoped. He compared it to Dunkirk, the hasty 1940 evacuation of British and French troops from France, which he described as “chaotic, but a success.”

In the minutes, Liberian officials regularly complain about the donors, and the donors argue back. On Nov. 12, James Dorbor Jallah, the task force’s deputy manager, said: “People will sit in D.C. or Geneva and want to direct what is happening here.”

The health minister, Dr. Walter T. Gwenigale, backed him up, complaining that “the U.N. and other agencies got their money before the ink was even dry,” while, he said, a group run by a Liberian pastor to teach rural people about Ebola “has not gotten one cent.”

On Sunday, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf replaced Dr. Gwenigale without explaining why, but said he would remain an adviser. Dr. Emmanuel T. Dolo, Ms. Johnson Sirleaf’s youth adviser, complained that the donors were “showing a level of disrespect” by judging Liberian community groups by “harsh standards” and “Western standards.”

At the same meeting, Mr. Nyenswah, the deputy health minister, pointed to his government’s “team leaders” and warned, “Partners in the room have not been engaging them and involving them in strategy — but you have to.”

A representative of the United Nations Children’s Fund replied that the local pastor needed to prove he could do the work.

Two days later, Shiyong Wang, the World Bank representative, confirmed that United Nations agencies had received nearly all their money and that the Liberian government had received only 7 percent of the $23 million allotted to it. But, he said, the government had not produced required documentation — not even, for example, names of dead health workers whose families awaited compensation. He criticized the government’s “overly complex and bureaucratic approval process,” including three signatures on each document.

Dr. Rosling said the three signatures were an anticorruption measure. Beneficiary lists are hard to produce, he said, when Liberians have children whose births are often not officially recorded. And it was “arrogant,” he said, for donors, for example, to assign contracts to operate field hospitals without Health Ministry permission.

The Nov. 12 meeting appeared to end on a bitter note, with Mr. Nyenswah telling every agency to document within 48 hours what people it had and what their jobs were. “If you don’t give us this list,” he concluded, “you are not allowed in this meeting.”

The meeting of Nov. 14 opens with Mr. Nyenswah reminding scientists not to do research without permission from a government ethics review board. On Nov. 17, Dr. Dolo complains that “There are a lot of people in this room who never contribute anything to this meeting.”
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/ebola-transmission-intense-sierra-leone-27046298

Mali Ebola Crisis Deepens With Doctor's Death

Nov 20, 2014

Mali's emerging Ebola crisis deepened Thursday as the government announced that a doctor had died from the disease, becoming the second health worker fatality linked to a single patient initially thought to have kidney disease.

At least five people now have died from Ebola after coming into contact with a 70-year-old grand imam, who was brought to the Malian capital of Bamako from Guinea, the bordering country where the regional Ebola epidemic first began.

The death of a 25-year-old male nurse at Clinique Pasteur who treated the imam first prompted health authorities to review past patients. The imam's family members who had brought him to Bamako all were later admitted to an Ebola clinic back in Guinea upon their return.

Malian authorities are now following more than 300 people, including those who helped prepare the imam's body for burial after he succumbed to the disease.

Health workers have been particularly vulnerable to contracting Ebola because of their close contact with the sick, who spread the virus through bodily fluids such as blood, urine and feces. On Thursday, a Cuban doctor who had contracted the virus in Sierra Leone was flown out of the country en route to treatment in Switzerland.

Despite some improvements in Liberia and Guinea, the World Health Organization said Wednesday that the spread of Ebola remains "intense" in most of Sierra Leone. Some 168 new confirmed cases emerged in a single week in Sierra Leone's capital of Freetown recently, according to a WHO report.

"The numbers are still rising and the transmission is persistent and widespread," said Amadu Kamara, the U.N.'s Ebola crisis manager in Sierra Leone. "Rapid and coordinated response are needed to overcome the spread of the Ebola disease."

The WHO report released late Wednesday indicated that Sierra Leone had the lowest percentage of Ebola patients who had been isolated ? only 13 percent. By comparison, that figure was 72 percent in Guinea.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://news.yahoo.com/bandits-guinea...105816420.html

Bandits in Guinea steal suspected Ebola blood

Boubacar Diallo

Roadside bandits in Guinea stole a cooler containing blood samples that are believed to have Ebola, officials said Friday, warning of the risks and vowing tighter security measures for transport of such potentially contagious cargo.

The vehicle was transporting test tubes containing blood when the roadside robbery took place on the route from Kankan prefecture in central Guinea to a test site in Gueckedou, in the south, national health officials said.

The bandits held up the minibus taxi carrying the samples from a suspected Ebola patient on Wednesday, said Guinea Red Cross press officer Faya Etienne Tolno. Why they took the blood samples is unknown.

Officials appealed on national radio for the thieves to return the samples.

"We have informed the security services. If these thieves handle this blood, it will be dangerous," Dr. Barry Moumie, who heads patient care for the national Ebola response coordination committee, told The Associated Press.

"I can assure you, however, that the sample-transportation procedures will now be strengthened to avoid such disappointments," he said.

Ebola, which has killed more than 5,000 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, is spread primarily by contact with infected bodily fluids including blood, feces and vomit.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://news.yahoo.com/bandits-guinea...105816420.html

Bandits in Guinea steal suspected Ebola blood

Boubacar Diallo

Roadside bandits in Guinea stole a cooler containing blood samples that are believed to have Ebola, officials said Friday, warning of the risks and vowing tighter security measures for transport of such potentially contagious cargo.

The vehicle was transporting test tubes containing blood when the roadside robbery took place on the route from Kankan prefecture in central Guinea to a test site in Gueckedou, in the south, national health officials said.

The bandits held up the minibus taxi carrying the samples from a suspected Ebola patient on Wednesday, said Guinea Red Cross press officer Faya Etienne Tolno. Why they took the blood samples is unknown.

Officials appealed on national radio for the thieves to return the samples.

"We have informed the security services. If these thieves handle this blood, it will be dangerous," Dr. Barry Moumie, who heads patient care for the national Ebola response coordination committee, told The Associated Press.

"I can assure you, however, that the sample-transportation procedures will now be strengthened to avoid such disappointments," he said.

Ebola, which has killed more than 5,000 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, is spread primarily by contact with infected bodily fluids including blood, feces and vomit.

Are we sure they were taken only by accident?

Longer version of the article.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20141121/af--ebola-guinea-samples_stolen-4a97cbd5e6.html

Bandits in Guinea steal suspected Ebola blood

Nov 21, 12:57 PM (ET)
By BOUBACAR DIALLO


(AP) Children out of school climb a wall to see a civilian helicopter land in Gueckedou,...
Full Image


CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) — It was a highway robbery but the bandits got more than they bargained for when they stopped a taxi in Guinea and made off with blood samples that are believed to be infected with the deadly Ebola virus.

Authorities publicly appealed on national radio Friday to the unidentified robbers to hand over the samples that were stolen from the taxi during its 265-kilometer (165-mile) trek on winding rural roads from the central Kankan prefecture to a test site in southern Gueckedou.

The samples, stored in tightly wrapped vials tucked into a cooler bag, were in the care of a Red Cross courier who was among nine passengers sharing a taxi when three bandits on a motorbike led the attack near the town of Kissidougou, a local Red Cross official said.

The robbers forced the passengers out, stole mobile phones, cash and jewelry, and fired into the air as they demanded the handover of the cooler bag, said Saa Mamady Leno of the Red Cross in Gueckedou. The courier, Abubakar Donzo, was later questioned by police.


(AP) In this picture taken Thursday Nov. 20, 2014, an MSF Ebola heath worker is sprayed...
Full Image


Faya Etienne Tolno, a spokesman for the Guinea Red Cross, said the aid group had a shortage of vehicles for transport, which explains why a taxi was used. No one was injured in the incident, which took place on a road known for banditry.

"We don't understand why they stole the blood sample. Perhaps they thought there was cash hidden in the flask," Tolno said.

Dr. Barry Moumie, who heads patient care for the national Ebola response coordination committee, told The Associated Press: "We have informed the security services. If these thieves handle this blood, it will be dangerous."

Ebola is spread primarily by contact with infected bodily fluids including blood, feces and vomit.

"I can assure you, however, that the sample-transportation procedures will now be strengthened to avoid such disappointments," Moumie said.


(AP) In this photo taken Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, a woman runs through a village near...
Full Image


The theft underscores how hazards abound and hiccups remain in the aid response, despite millions of dollars' worth of international support pouring into West Africa to fight a virus now responsible for more than 5,000 deaths in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.

Dr. Hans Rosling, who is advising Liberia on its Ebola response, noted the difficulties of transporting such samples, saying countries and groups like the United States and the United Nations have rules about moving such hazardous materials.

In Liberia, "we use specifically allocated motorbikes and cars. We use what's available and what's reasonable. We have to organize things as we go along," he said. "It may have been the correct decision in Guinea (to use a taxi) and the robbery was just a sad mishap."

"There's no way we can secure transport in all of this area," Rosling said. "It was a good initiative to try to get the sample out."

International assistance has been increasing in Sierra Leone, where the World Health Organization has warned about an "intense" surge in cases.

The United Nations Children's Fund was working Friday to ramp up the number of community care centers in order to isolate more suspected patients. A total of 10 community care centers with eight beds each have been opened in the northern district of Bombali, one of the areas hit hardest in Sierra Leone. The outbreak in Sierra Leone alone is believed to have killed more than 1,200 people.

Five more centers will open in the next week, UNICEF spokesman John James said Friday.

The community care centers, built after consulting local officials and traditional leaders in rural areas, are part of an effort to break transmission by isolating more suspected patients, James said.

Such centers are critically important in halting the spread of the disease. A WHO report released Wednesday indicates that Sierra Leone has the lowest percentage of Ebola patients who have been isolated — only 13 percent.

"It's a way to isolate people, give them basic care in the area where they live. And it's easier for families to see them," James said. Those patients who test positive for Ebola will ideally be transferred to treatment or holding centers, he added.

A Dutch naval vessel arrived in Freetown, Sierra Leone's capital, on Thursday stocked with medical supplies and two laboratories that will be staffed by Dutch experts and managed by Save the Children and the U.K.'s foreign assistance arm. The supplies were provided by nine European Union countries, according to Hans Docter, the Dutch special envoy for Ebola.

The Dutch government will soon announce an additional 10 million euros ($12.4 million) for NGOs working on the Ebola fight, Docter said.

WHO announced Friday that Congo's separate Ebola outbreak was officially over after 42 days passed with no new cases. The outbreak, unrelated to the one in West Africa, was concentrated in northwest Equateur province and killed at least 49 people, according to local officials. Congo declared the outbreak over earlier this month.

---

AP writer Michelle Faul in Gueckedou, Guinea, Clarence Roy-Macaulay in Freetown, Sierra Leone and Maria Cheng in London contributed to this report.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Mali just keeps getting worse. The latest from flutracker.com
I question the ability of the Mali government to fully trace the HUNDREDS OF POTENTIAL EXPOSED PEOPLE.





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niman
Post subject: Re: WHO Mali Ebola Update
PostPosted: Thu Nov 20, 2014 10:40 am
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Mali: Details of the additional cases of Ebola virus disease

Ebola situation assessment - 20 November 2014


As of today, Mali has officially reported a cumulative total of 6 cases of Ebola virus disease, with 5 deaths. Of the 6 cases, 5 are laboratory confirmed and one remains probable as no samples were available for testing.

These numbers include the 2-year-old girl who initially imported the virus into Mali and died of the disease on 24 October.

Intensive tracing and monitoring of the child’s numerous contacts, including many who were monitored in hospital, failed to detect any additional cases. All 118 contacts, including family members, have now passed through the 21-day incubation period without developing symptoms.

The virus was almost certainly re-introduced into Mali by a 70-year-old Grand Imam from Guinea, who was admitted to Bamako’s Pasteur Clinic on 25 October and died on 27 October. He has been reclassified as a Guinea case, as he developed symptoms in that country. No samples were available for testing.

Pasteur Clinic: direct and indirect links
All 5 cases in this new outbreak are linked, 3 directly and 2 indirectly, to the patient in the Pasteur Clinic.

The first was a 25-year-old male nurse who worked at the clinic and was assigned to care for the Imam. He was hospitalized on 8 November. His case was laboratory-confirmed on 11 November and he died the same day.

The second case was confirmed in a doctor who worked at the clinic and treated the Imam. He developed symptoms on 5 November and was hospitalized on 8 November. Laboratory confirmation was received on 12 November. He is currently undergoing treatment.

The third case was a 51-year-old friend of the Imam who visited him at the Pasteur Clinic. He developed symptoms on 7 November and died on 10 November from an undiagnosed cause. He is the country’s single probable case.

The friend’s infection led to an additional two confirmed and fatal cases. The first was a 57-year-old woman who had direct contact with the friend. She developed symptoms on 29 October. She was admitted to another clinic on 11 November and then transferred to a hospital on 12 November. She died that same day.

The second case was the woman’s son. He visited yet another clinic on 5 November and died at home on 14 November. Ebola infection was laboratory-confirmed in both cases.

Stepped up contact tracing
A massive effort is currently under way to identify all potential chains of transmission, monitor contacts, and prevent the outbreak from growing larger. At present 338 contacts have been identified and 303 (90%) of these have been placed under daily surveillance.

This rigorous “detective” work shows that the deceased nurse from the Pasteur Clinic had the largest number of contacts, at 98, including 75 family members.

As the successful experiences in Senegal and Nigeria show, aggressive contact tracing, which seeks to find and break every chain of transmission immediately after an imported case, can hold the number of additional cases to very small numbers and support a rapid end to the outbreak.

The Ministry of Health, with assistance from the WHO country office, has augmented the number of staff engaged in contact tracing by drawing on polio surveillance teams and using local medical students with training in epidemiology.

In addition, WHO has deployed 10 epidemiologists through its Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network, or GOARN.

The country is also ramping up its capacity to perform exit screening at the Bamako airport.

Guinea: Many mourners attended the funeral
The Imam was buried in his native village of Kourémalé, Guinea, on 28 October. That event has now been investigated. Thousands of mourners may have attended the funeral. Some of them touched the body as part of the traditional funeral ceremony. About 300 contacts are being traced.

Experts in Mali and at WHO agree that Mali will remain at risk of further imported cases as long as transmission across the border in ongoing.

http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebo ... 4-mali/en/

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J
Mali: MSF expands activities to fight Ebola outbreak
20 NOVEMBER, 2014
After a new case of Ebola was detected in the Malian capital, Bamako, on 11 November, MSF has reinforced its team and expanded its activities to help stop the disease from spreading further.

Swift and coordinated action is of paramount importance in the days immediately after new cases are reported, the medical organisation says.

After a new case of Ebola was detected in the Malian capital, Bamako, on 11 November, the international medical organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has reinforced its team and expanded its activities to help stop the disease from spreading further.

Swift and coordinated action is of paramount importance in stemming any new outbreak, especially in the first days after a new case is detected, MSF warns. So far there have been five reported deaths in Mali during the outbreak, three of people confirmed with Ebola and two of suspected cases.

One patient with Ebola and two patients with suspected Ebola are currently being treated at MSF’s case management centre in Bamako, which it is running in collaboration with CNAM (Mali’s national disease centre.)

MSF is training Malian staff from CNAM in the management of Ebola patients, while overseeing the setting up of an ambulance system for transporting patients, and the organisation of safe burials. MSF is also involved in tracing the contacts of those who may have been affected by the disease, in coordination with the Malian authorities and the World Health Organization.

Meanwhile an MSF team has travelled to the area bordering Guinea, where new cases of Ebola have been detected, to determine the needs in the area.

MSF’s activities in Bamako were reinforced last week with a team arriving from Kayes, where the first Ebola case in Mali was detected.

https://www.msf.org.za/msf-publications ... a-outbreak
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
STILL MORE OFFICIAL WHO DISINFORMATION

:whistle: Doomer Doug takes SHARP EXCEPTION to the incredible statement the Ebola epidemic in the Congo is "over." WHAT THE $$%% ARE THESE PEOPLE SMOKING? It is not over. There are likely dozens/hundreds of people running around the more remote reaches of the Congo. Again, WHO shows it has no idea of what the true situation is on the ground.

Next, it looks like the whining, delusional statements about "Liberia and Sierra Leone being "under control" or "declining cases" PROVED TO BE LIES. Again, there are hundreds of new cases starting to show up in both Liberia and Sierra Leone, including areas that were said to be either dealt with or had no previous cases.

I will also note WHO has backed off its 500,000 cases by Christmas scenario, although I wonder on what medical evidence they based it.



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Post subject: WHO November 21 Ebola Road Map
PostPosted: Fri Nov 21, 2014 2:07 pm
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WHO has issued a November 21 Ebola road map

http://www.who.int/csr/disease/ebola/si ... eports/en/

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niman
Post subject: Re: WHO November 21 Ebola Road Map
PostPosted: Fri Nov 21, 2014 2:08 pm
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SUMMARY
A total of 15 351 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola virus disease (EVD) have been reported in six affected countries (Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Spain, and the United States of America) and two previously affected countries (Nigeria, Senegal) up to the end of 18 November 2014. There have been 5459 reported deaths.

Following the WHO Ebola Response Roadmap structure[1], country reports fall into two categories: 1) those with widespread and intense transmission (Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone); and 2) those with or that have had an initial case or cases, or with localized transmission (Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Spain, and the United States of America). A separate, unrelated outbreak of EVD in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has now been declared over.

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niman
Post subject: Re: WHO November 21 Ebola Road Map
PostPosted: Fri Nov 21, 2014 2:08 pm
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1. COUNTRIES WITH WIDESPREAD AND INTENSE TRANSMISSION
A total of 15 319 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of EVD and 5444 deaths have been reported up to the end of the 18 November by the Ministries of Health of Guinea and Sierra Leone, and 17 November by the Ministry of Health of Liberia (table 1).

A total of 588 health-care workers (HCWs) are known to have been infected with EVD: 94 in Guinea; 341 in Liberia; 2 in Mali; 11 in Nigeria; 136 in Sierra Leone; 1 in Spain; and 3 in the United States of America (2 were infected in the USA and 1 in Guinea). A total of 337 HCWs have died.

Table 1: Confirmed, probable, and suspected cases in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone
Country
Case definition
Cumulative cases
Cumulative deaths
Guinea
Confirmed
1745
998
Probable
216
216
Suspected
86
0
Total
2047
1214
Liberia


Confirmed
2669
*
Probable
1750
*
Suspected
2663
*
Total
7082
2963
Sierra Leone
Confirmed
5152
1058
Probable
79
174
Suspected
959
35
Total
6190
1267
Total

15 319
5444
Data are based on official information reported by the Ministries of Health of Guinea and Sierra Leone up to the end of 18 November, and the Ministry of Health of Liberia up to the end of 17 November. These numbers are subject to change due to ongoing reclassification, retrospective investigation and availability of laboratory results. *Data not available.

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Mali announces new Ebola case
AFP - 23/11/2014

http://www.menafn.com/1094018785/Mali-announces-new-Ebola-case

(MENAFN - AFP) Mali announced Saturday a new case of Ebola in a man who is fighting for his life in an intensive care unit in the capital Bamako.

"Among two suspected cases who were being tested, one was found negative, the other positive. He was placed in an isolation unit for intensive treatment," the health ministry said in a statement.

Mali, the newest country to be caught up in the epidemic, recorded its seventh Ebola death on Thursday. So far no one who has contracted the deadly tropical pathogen has survived.

The contagion entered the country in October when a two-year-old girl who had come from Guinea died in the western town of Kayes, without spreading the virus any further.

Three weeks later an Islamic cleric, also from Guinea, died in the capital Bamako, transmitting the virus, directly or indirectly, to at least five people, all of whom have now also died.

The health ministry said 310 people were under surveillance as a result of that chain of transmission.

Around 5,500 people have died this year in the west African Ebola outbreak -- almost all in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia -- among more than 15,000 infected.

Ebola, one of the deadliest viruses known to man, is spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person showing symptoms such as fever or vomiting.

People caring for the sick or handling the bodies of the infected are particularly vulnerable.

Recent data have shown a decline in cases in Liberia, the worst-hit country, and Guinea, but last week, 533 new cases were reported in Sierra Leone -- the highest weekly tally since the epidemic began in that country.

===

100% mortality in Mali.

533 new cases in Sierra Leone (official figures).

===

.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
G.Alexander(BRKNEWS) ‏@MajorNews911 5m5 minutes ago

JUST IN: 2 boys return to Columbus, OH from West Africa, transported to hospital to be tested for Ebola. - @wsyx6
 
Everybody in the developed countries thinks that the storm has passed. Just remember that Ebola is passaging through humans day after day, giving it every chance in the world to make a great leap forward. If that happens it will come on us so suddenly, it will be like an EMP burst over the center of the U.S.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
G.Alexander(BRKNEWS) ‏@MajorNews911 5m5 minutes ago

JUST IN: 2 boys return to Columbus, OH from West Africa, transported to hospital to be tested for Ebola. - @wsyx6



Breaking911 @Breaking911 · 12m 12 minutes ago

#BREAKING : Two children, ages 4 and 6, transported to Columbus, Ohio hospital with a fever after recently traveling to West Africa -WBNS-TV
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Trending Global ‏@Trending_Global 32m32 minutes ago

2 children are being tested for #Ebola in Ohio: Two children who recently traveled to… http://goo.gl/fb/YCHl6v #tech


posted for fair use
http://mashable.com/2014/11/23/2-children-tested-for-ebola-in-ohio/?utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Mashable+%28Mashable%29&utm_cid=Mash-Prod-RSS-Feedburner-All-Partial&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=feedburner

2 children are being tested for Ebola in Ohio
Ebola_virus
Created by CDC microbiologist Cynthia Goldsmith, this colorized transmission electron micrograph (TEM) reveals some of the ultrastructural morphology displayed by an Ebola virus virion.
Image: CDC/Cynthia Goldsmith
Lorenzo-headshot-sq
By Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai1 hour ago

Two children who recently traveled to West Africa are being tested for Ebola in Columbus, Ohio, after they showed symptoms of fever.

The children, whose names have not been released, are 4 and 6 years old. They were transported to an area hospital at 2 a.m. Sunday, according to a local news report, citing Columbus Public Health.


See also: Eyewitness to Hell: Life in Ebola-Ravaged Liberia

#BREAKING : Children, ages 4 and 6, transported to Columbus hospital with a fever after recently traveling to West Africa.

— 10TV.com (@10TV) November 23, 2014


Health officials were previously monitoring the two children on a daily basis, after they returned to the U.S. The children are now being screened for the virus, as well as respiratory illnesses.


This story is developing...

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
Topics: Ebola, U.S., US & World, World
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
more info on the two kids in Ohio...

posted for fair use


2 Children Being Tested for Possible Ebola in Ohio
Nov 23, 2014, 1:17 PM ET
By GEETIKA RUDRA

HT_nationwide_childrens_hospital_jtm_141123_16x9_992.jpg

PHOTO: An exterior view of Nationwide Childrens Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
An exterior view of Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, pictured May 9, 2013.
Nationwide Children's Hospital/Flickr

Ohio public health officials are testing two children for the Ebola virus after they developed fevers following a trip to West Africa.

"We have two cases that we're testing," Jose Rodriguez, director of public affairs and communications for the Columbus Public Health Department, said today. "We're not in a panic situation."

Two sisters, ages 4 and 6, were taken to Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus early this morning after they showed signs of a fever, Rodriguez said.

They are being kept in isolation and are receiving supportive care, Rodriguez said. Doctors are also testing the girls for other respiratory illnesses, like influenza and enterovirus D68, Rodriguez said.

The girls' mother is not being held in isolation. She was not identified as a high-risk individual, Rodriguez explained, because she was not in Sierra Leone as a health care worker.

The identities of the girls and their number have not been released.

The girls returned from Sierra Leone 17 days ago, Rodriguez said. Since returning, their temperatures have been monitored twice daily.

Rodriguez said the girls will remain in isolation for several days. If they test negative for Ebola, they will likely be tested again.

EMS staff who took the children to the hospital wore protective gear and are not considered to be at risk for contracting the virus. They will be monitored if the children test positive for the virus, according to the Columbus Health Department.

The children's test results were expected later today.

The Columbus Health Department was working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the state health department on the situation.

Sierra Leone is one of the four countries hardest hit by the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/children-tested-ebola-ohio/story?id=27117331
 

the watcher

Inactive
The girls' mother is not being held in isolation. She was not identified as a high-risk individual, Rodriguez explained, because she was not in Sierra Leone as a health care worker.

/\/\/\ FAIL! She was in DIRECT contact with the daughters. When did I slip into the Twilight Zone?
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
Everybody in the developed countries thinks that the storm has passed. Just remember that Ebola is passaging through humans day after day, giving it every chance in the world to make a great leap forward. If that happens it will come on us so suddenly, it will be like an EMP burst over the center of the U.S.

It's in the US, but the curve looks flat when it's a few dozen or a couple hundred victims. It's deathly quiet when the PTB give instructions to turn off the news.

I told my family (in my periodic Ebola heads-up that they're getting tired of) that the next news they hear will be when a neighbor or a family member gets it.

My next family letter will be about preventing and treating on your own, because that's how it will be. I owe a debt to the membership here for all the ideas.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
watch...with the roll the US is on...a guy who thinks he is an emperor, US on the verge of possible country-wide riots...ebola would be just one more little nail. These two will probably test positive. (publicly)


Breaking911 @Breaking911 · 27m 27 minutes ago

Mom, 2 Daughters In Isolation, Home Quarantined After Returning From Sierra Leone - http://bit.ly/1Fgz7ti



posted for fair use
http://www.breaking911.com/mom-2-da...uarantined-after-returning-from-sierra-leone/

Sunday, November 23, 2014 | 2:26 pm EST
Mom, 2 Daughters In Isolation, Home Quarantined After Returning From Sierra Leone
By: Grant (Breaking911 Newsroom)
November 23, 2014 | 2:26 PM

A Columbus, Ohio family is awaiting test results sent in this morning. At a Sunday briefing, Columbus Public Health revealed that close to 50 people that may have been in contact with the family and are being closely monitored. The family returned from the Sierra Leone region of West Africa 17 days ago.

The test results should be in by 6 p.m. this evening. The family is in isolation and their home has been quarantined.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/ebola-update-11212014.html

Friday, November 21, 2014
Ebola Update 11/21/2014


Looking at the latest WHO data (such as it is, with Liberia as usual electing to someday get around to coughing up some made-up numbers), what you can definitely say is this:

Sierra Leone has new cases in 100% (12/12) provinces in the last 21 days;
Liberia has new cases in 75% (10 out of 15) provinces in that same period;
Guinea has new cases in 50% (16 out of 33) provinces.

Mali's fatalities are all 6 of the confirmed cases, while they are following 327 exposure contacts in the capitol.

Of the confirmed and admitted cases worldwide, there are 100+ fresh confirmed cases per day, every day, and the most intense number of new cases in every instance is in the capitols of the respective countries, in each case among cities of around 1M persons.

In short, none of this points to outbreaks being any sort of controlled, nor even slackening much. The only thing that is certain is that people aren't coming to official treatment centers, thus not getting tested and confirmed as official cases, which seems to suit the respective governments just fine, and feed their penchant for minimizing the degree of infection, which their general illiteracy and innumeracy tends to support as well.

The only actual good news is that no one new - yet - has managed to drag their infected asses into London, Paris, the U.S., or apparently anywhere else, largely due to the recent travel bans and mandatory returnee quarantines, even as international aid to those countries has increased, and thus totally undermining any and all of the specious arguments against adopting those travel sanctions from the outset.

And even that thin reed breaks the minute there's one solid cluster of cases anywhere outside the now four affected/infected countries.

How much worse reality is than the cooked "official" numbers is would be anyone's guess, since the governments involved have notably cracked down on any reporting that doesn't accord with their own rosy figures, and outsider journalism worthy of the name has essentially departed, with most "reporting" done second- or third-hand, via telephone, fly-by, or from the bar outside the relevant agencies' briefing rooms, and a none-too-subtle deliberate spiking of reports and squelching of anything resembling actual reporting here in the US. Note, for example, finding out how many febrile symptomatic travelers have been intercepted is like asking for the nuclear weapon launch codes, or getting a confirmed sighting of Ebola Czar Klain, who surfaced precisely once in the last month for about 15 minutes, then submerged again to points unknown. (The chief benefit of which has been to stop rubbing the entire nation's noses in the limitless and studied assclownery of Drs. Frieden and Fauci, by throwing a shepherd hook around them both, and dragging them out of press briefing rooms non-stop since mid-October. This administration may still not have the first effing clue about handling Ebola, but they at least understand how to control the lazy and stupid bastards in the media, starve them of easy stories, and make further Ebola outbreak coverage resemble a sportscast of submarine races. Mission accomplished.)

The only other mildly cheery observation is that none of the hubris and happygas of officialdom so wall-to-wall prevalent two months ago is in evidence anywhere, so the one thing you can remain assured of is that there's nothing good to report whatsoever, else the gas-passers, and their media lickspittles would be only too cheerfully passing it along by the shovel-load.

So consider this a momentary respite, to continue to get your own stuff together, and hope that things continue in this vein for as long as possible, if not actually improve. If or when things begin to fall apart in W. Africa, or a solid cluster of cases appears outside it, it will become rather hard to cover up, and the sudden panic will bubble a bit higher in each succeeding wave, and become harder to whitewash.

Posted by Aesop at 8:37 PM
Labels: Ebola
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/taking-out-trash.html

Saturday, November 22, 2014
Taking Out The Trash


As any good fan of shows like The West Wing knows, every White House administration has a desire to spin the news in a favorable light, and one of the ways they can do this is by letting information out in certain ways. When there are stories they have to talk about, however little the y wish to do so, they simply lump that information into the weekend information dump, downplaying it by burying it amongst a ton of other garbage released Fridays and over the weekend, in a process that became known on that series, as in real life, as "taking out the trash". Reporters like weekends too, and no one watches the news on the weekends.

So with that background, imagine my surprise, after the second solid week of essentially nothing but fluff regarding the ongoing Ebola outbreak, when the NYTimes elected to burp out this latest coverage late on Friday afternoon:

The leaders of the United Nations and the World Health Organization expressed renewed alarm on Friday about Ebola’s tenacity in Africa and, in particular, its potential to ravage a fourth country, Mali, where they said hundreds of people had been exposed to an infected cleric who died last month.
At a webcast news conference from the World Bank offices in Washington, the United Nations’ secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, and the W.H.O.’s director general, Dr. Margaret Chan, also appeared to reset their schedules for containing the Ebola virus, which has sickened at least 15,351 people and killed 5,459, according to a W.H.O. update posted earlier Friday.
Mr. Ban said nothing about the goal of safely burying 70 percent of the dead and treating 70 percent of the sick by Dec. 1, and instead expressed hope that the outbreak could be contained by the middle of next year.
Mr. Ban’s special envoy on the Ebola crisis, David Nabarro, also expressed doubts about achieving the Dec. 1 treatment goal in comments at the United Nations. “Confident? No,” he told reporters outside the Security Council, which was holding a meeting on the Ebola crisis.
While the effort to halt the virus has made progress, with strong indications that the worst-case outcomes might be avoided, the tone of the remarks by Mr. Ban and Dr. Chan was cautious.
“The international response is outpaced by this Ebola spread,” Mr. Ban said.
Warning against any complacency, Dr. Chan added, “We must not forget: Ebola is a formidable enemy.”
Most of the cases have been in the three most afflicted countries: Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
Yet the focus of the message of Mr. Ban and Dr. Chan was their concern about Mali, a vast country where the government does not have full control and where a United Nations peacekeeping force is deployed. At least six people in Mali have died of Ebola.
A successful effort to halt Ebola infections in Mali last month, prompted by an infected 2-year-old from Guinea, has now been overshadowed by a second and far more serious source of infection, from an imam who also had come from Guinea. His symptoms had been misdiagnosed as a kidney problem after he traveled to Bamako, the capital, to seek treatment.
Dr. Chan said nearly 500 people in Mali and Guinea had come into contact with the imam.
Mr. Ban said that a team led by Dr. Chan was headed to Mali and that a new support center would be established there. Dr. Chan was blunt about the potential for a worsening situation in Mali.
“We are scaling up our action,” she told reporters, adding, “We must smother this little fire, little smoke, before it gets out of control.”
The W.H.O.’s own figures tell a worrying story about the progress in containing the virus. Only 26 percent of the necessary Ebola treatment centers were up and running this week, and barely a fraction of the smaller community care centers that health experts now say are more needed. Fewer than one-fourth of reported cases were isolated, with Sierra Leone reporting only 13 percent. At the Security Council meeting on Friday afternoon, it became clear that two months after the world promised to rally to help the affected countries of West Africa, there remained significant shortfalls, even as diplomats said international aid had made a difference.
“It would be reckless to think that just because we hit some of our benchmarks, we have contained the virus’s deadly spread,” said Samantha Power, the United States ambassador.
Thomas Mauget, an aid worker speaking by video link from Conakry, the capital of Guinea, raised the alarm about new hot spots emerging in the country, saying “international mobilization must be intensified.”
The Security Council nudged the United Nations Ebola response mission to more quickly expand its operations.


TL;DR summary:
*> The UN wishful thinking Dec. 1st 70% containment date has been pushed to the middle of next year.
IOW, they see no hope in hell that this thing is anywhere close to being controlled for months and months, at which time they'll probably conclude that mid-2015 was a pipe dream as well.
*> The number of exposures in Mali is no longer 327, it's now "over 500".
IOW, Ebola is officially off to the races in Mali (they're already isolating the third tier of infectees from the second Index Patient), and probably about to leap to where things were in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone last May, and it will make the jump in Mali in one great leap forward. The UN and NGOs are scrambling to pitch in, but it's probably far too late for that, and they don't have any reserve capacity to deal with this latest front. Look for the next report to tell you that they're now tracking "over 1000" exposures, and the latest confirmed case has exposed other people as well, as Ebola just keeps doubling apace ahead of all efforts to stop it in Mali, just like it did in the first three countries of outbreak. And Mali is more populous, medically under-served, and generally illiterate than any of them.
*> The prior "Ebola is slacking off, we're winning" happygas has been replaced by the cold hard realization that they are so far from screwed they can no longer see it receding into the distance.
They have nowhere near the number of centers they think they need, they cannot even isolate 25% of confirmed cases (which means they're isolating precisely 0% of unsuspected cases), but they're absolutely certain that they've succeeded in scaring people enough that they'll no longer report their infections nor arrive at Ebola Treatment Centers (AKA Quarantine Death Camps), which is the only way you have that many opening beds even as the disease spreads unrestrained.
In short, their entire efforts thus far, precisely like everything they've done prior, remain a complete, unmitigated, and unvarnished failure when they admit the truth to themselves, and look at their own available data.

In WWII, there was a brief period known as the "Phony War", when things seemed hopeful, as the conflict failed to catch fire after war was declared, mainly because the Germans took pause to consolidate their gains, and re-deploy their forces for the next round of attacks, mostly during the quiet winter months when campaigning wasn't so favorable anyways.

That's where this lull is now, especially when the press and government here have belatedly decided, for mostly partisan reasons, coupled with the sincere desire not to look like the clueless bunch of lackwits they've both demonstrated themselves to be on crisis after crisis, have co-operated (if not outright conspired) to underplay, downgrade, and simply ignore the common sense implications of this crisis, spike the stories about it, and refuse to cover or comment about it.

It's bad enough when you catch a government spokeshole lying.
But when the "journalists" covering them give them a stage wink as they do it, expecting either of them to tell you anything useful, let alone truthful, is a forlorn hope.

That isn't going to change on this story unless or until people start dropping in the streets in NYFC, if then.

You have from now until that time - which could be any amount of time at all - to get yourselves and your preparations together. You can plan ahead, or you can go shopping after Thanksgiving, and imagine everything is just fine, and this Ebola thing isn't coming to us anytime soon, even as we make plans for rotating thousands of troops into and out of the hot zone there, while the disease spreads across four countries unchecked.

Use your time wisely.

Posted by Aesop at 12:32 PM
Labels: Ebola
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-ebola-is-different_23.html

Sunday, November 23, 2014
Why Ebola Is Different


(Reuters) - An outbreak of the plague has killed 40 people out of 119 confirmed cases in Madagascar since late August and there is a risk of the disease spreading rapidly in the capital, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.So far two cases and one death have been recorded in the capital Antananarivo but those figures could climb quickly due to "the city's high population density and the weakness of the healthcare system", the WHO warned.

"The situation is further complicated by the high level of resistance to deltamethrin (an insecticide used to control fleas) that has been observed in the country," it added.

Plague, a bacterial disease, is mainly spread from one rodent to another by fleas. Humans bitten by an infected flea usually develop a bubonic form of plague, which swells the lymph node and can be treated with antibiotics, the WHO said.

If the bacteria reach the lungs, the patient develops pneumonia (pneumonic plague), which is transmissible from person to person through infected droplets spread by coughing. It is "one of the most deadly infectious diseases" and can kill people within 24 hours. Two percent of the cases reported in Madagascar so far have been pneumonic, it added.

Which, on the surface, would appear almost 10 times worse than Ebola in Mali.

And it would be, except for one thing:

You can hand somebody with bubonic plague about $25 worth of doxycycline, and send them home, (presuming they're not already on death's doorstep) and they'll be fine in about 10 days or so.
Problem solved.

Ebola, OTOH, requires a bit more in terms of resources for maybe 4 chances out of 5 to survive.

Plague:
$25/patient

Ebola:
$500,000 and up/patient


This is why the US has saved 8 out of 10 Ebola patients (and will, as long as we don't get more than a paltry few at a time) and why West African nations lose about 75% of theirs, which is just about how many would live and die if they did absolutely nothing.

Because absolutely nothing is the amount of resources they have there 24/7/365/forever.

That's how Liberia, with a population half the size of NYC, has already lost more people to Ebola this year than the total casualties we suffered in 10 years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan combined.

And if the number of our victims ever starts to cut into the resources we can devote to their care, our death toll is going to start looking a lot more like the ones in Africa.

Posted by Aesop at 12:00 AM
Labels: Ebola
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The powers that be will continue to lie until the objective reality overwhelms their fantasy on what the true state of Ebola is.

Africa is now officially road kill. There is NOTHING TO BE DONE FOR AFRICA AT THIS POINT. Whatever "resources" are now deployed, or in the near to distant future are too little and too late. If, repeat if, the kind of resources now being sent to Africa had bent sent in July or August, we would have a possible ability to deal with Ebola. This was not done, and there is nothing to be done to control the OUT OF CONTROL EBOLA EPIDEMIC IN WEST AFRICA AND MALI.

Mali is, in my opinion, the defining point failure. Granted, Mail's government got its head out of its #$#$ faster than some other African countries, but it will make no difference in end. THERE ARE HUNDREDS, POSSIBLY SEVERAL THOUSAND PEOPLE WHO WERE DIRECTLY EXPOSED TO THE TWO INDEX CASES. Per the usual result most of them did not seek medical treatment, were not monitored, much less treated or quarantined. They scattered to the wind where hundreds of additional cases, cases the powers that be, the Mali government, WHO and the CDC have no idea are now happening, are starting.

The bottom line here is we are going to see a regional Ebola epidemic in West Africa and other parts of Africa. This epidemic will play out over the next two to five years. It will, at best, kill tens of millions of Africans, shatter the authority of any government it comes into contact with, and will likely cause additional deaths from the collapse of the health care system dealing with other medical issues. It will cause deaths from starvation, social anarchy and chaos.

As long as Ebola remains in Africa, killing unknown people, quietly out in the sticks, or in the cesspool areas of the major cities, nobody will care.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
I guess Mali isn't as "under control" as the powers that be think.


http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/eb...ase-mali-confirmed-two-more-suspected-n254126

New Ebola Case in Mali Confirmed, Two More Suspected

BAMAKO, Mali — Mali on Saturday confirmed a new case of Ebola and said two more suspected patients are being tested, raising concern about a further spread of the disease, which has already killed at least five people in the country. The patient who tested positive "was placed in an isolation center for intensive treatment," said a government statement distributed Saturday. No details about the patient were provided.

Mali officials are monitoring 310 people to limit the spread of the disease, said the statement. Mali's five confirmed Ebola deaths are linked to a 70-year-old imam who was brought to the capital, Bamako, from Guinea, where the regional Ebola epidemic first began. The World Health Organization says more than 5,400 people have died in the current outbreak, mostly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Also on Saturday, the first group of volunteers from Britain's National Health Service arrived in Sierra Leone amid widespread concern about the worsening situation there. More than 30 NHS staffers, including general practitioners and nurses, were expected to stay in Freetown, the capital, for one week of training before moving to treatment centers across the country, Britain's Department for International Development said in a statement.
IN-DEPTH
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The new "official" Ebola death count. Multiply by somewhere between 4 and 10 and you are close enough for government work.


Ebola death toll rises to 5,459 - WHO
Reuters
November 22, 2014 2:57 AM






A U.N. convoy of soldiers passes a screen displaying a message on Ebola on a street in Abidjan
.

View photo
A U.N. convoy of soldiers passes a screen displaying a message on Ebola on a street in Abidjan August …
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GENEVA (Reuters) - The death toll in the Ebola epidemic has risen to 5,459 out of 15,351 cases identified in eight countries by the end of Nov. 18, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.

The figures showed an increase of 39 recorded deaths and 106 new cases since those issued on Wednesday.

"Transmission remains intense in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone," the WHO said, referring to the hardest-hit countries.

All six known Ebola cases in Mali have now died and 327 contacts exposed to the virus are being monitored in the capital Bamako, it said.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The Powers that be waffle on Ebola situation

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/22/world/africa/mali-ebola-epidemic-who.html?_r=1


Officials Revise Goals on Containing Ebola After Signs of Wider Exposure in Mali

By RICK GLADSTONE and SOMINI SENGUPTANOV. 21, 2014



The leaders of the United Nations and the World Health Organization expressed renewed alarm on Friday about Ebola’s tenacity in Africa and, in particular, its potential to ravage a fourth country, Mali, where they said hundreds of people had been exposed to an infected cleric who died last month.

At a webcast news conference from the World Bank offices in Washington, the United Nations’ secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, and the W.H.O.’s director general, Dr. Margaret Chan, also appeared to reset their schedules for containing the Ebola virus, which has sickened at least 15,351 people and killed 5,459, according to a W.H.O. update posted earlier Friday.

Mr. Ban said nothing about the goal of safely burying 70 percent of the dead and treating 70 percent of the sick by Dec. 1, and instead expressed hope that the outbreak could be contained by the middle of next year.

Mr. Ban’s special envoy on the Ebola crisis, David Nabarro, also expressed doubts about achieving the Dec. 1 treatment goal in comments at the United Nations. “Confident? No,” he told reporters outside the Security Council, which was holding a meeting on the Ebola crisis.:kaid:
West Africa

500 Miles

Atlantic Ocean

MOROCCO

WESTERN

SAHARA

ALGERIA

MAURITANIA

MALI

SENEGAL

NIGER

Bamako

BURKINA

FASO

GUINEA

IVORY

COAST

SIERRA

LEONE

LIBERIA

Gulf of Guinea

While the effort to halt the virus has made progress, with strong indications that the worst-case outcomes might be avoided, the tone of the remarks by Mr. Ban and Dr. Chan was cautious.

“The international response is outpaced by this Ebola spread,” Mr. Ban said.

Warning against any complacency, Dr. Chan added, “We must not forget: Ebola is a formidable enemy.”

Most of the cases have been in the three most afflicted countries: Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.

Yet the focus of the message of Mr. Ban and Dr. Chan was their concern about Mali, a vast country where the government does not have full control and where a United Nations peacekeeping force is deployed. At least six people in Mali have died of Ebola.

A successful effort to halt Ebola infections in Mali last month, prompted by an infected 2-year-old from Guinea, has now been overshadowed by a second and far more serious source of infection, from an imam who also had come from Guinea. His symptoms had been misdiagnosed as a kidney problem after he traveled to Bamako, the capital, to seek treatment.

Dr. Chan said nearly 500 people in Mali and Guinea had come into contact with the imam.

Mr. Ban said that a team led by Dr. Chan was headed to Mali and that a new support center would be established there.
Continue reading the main story
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
This means WHO is "officially saying" there are now nearly 16,000 people infected with Ebola. Of these, 5500 have "officially" died. The real numbers, based on NGO and other on the ground people, is a MINIMUM OF TIMES FOUR. There are really 64,000 people with Ebola, along with 22,000 dead. This number, 64,000 and 22,000 is the ABSOLUTE MINIMUM FOR AFRICA. If you use a factor of times ten, which is, if not certain at least somewhat plausible, you now have 160,000 infected, along with 55,000 dead. This is right now, today. Using the times four, up to times ten figure, you see why Ebola is now completely out of control in Africa.

Who said the other day they now reject their original 500,000 cases by December 31st, 2014 worst case number. Um, Doomer Doug's personal opinion, is Ebola has been doubling every two to there weeks since August. Ebola is at, again as an absolute minimum 4 times the WHO numbers. The statement Ebola is "slowing" in Liberia and Guinea is a LIE. The only thing slowing in either Liberia or Guinea is the ability of WHO et al to COUNT THE NUMBER OF ACTUAL, NOT REPORTED, CASES.


http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2014/11/22/387053/ebola-infection-count-passes-15300/

Ebola infection count exceeds 15,300: WHO
Guinean Red Cross workers prepare to carry the corpse of a victim of Ebola in the southeastern town of Macenta on November 21, 2014.
Guinean Red Cross workers prepare to carry the corpse of a victim of Ebola in the southeastern town of Macenta on November 21, 2014.
Sat Nov 22, 2014 8:52AM
Related Viewpoints:

More needed to tackle Ebola

The number of people believed to be infected with the deadly Ebola virus has surpassed 15,300, the World Health Organization (WHO) says.

According to the latest WHO figures released on Friday, the death toll in the Ebola epidemic has currently increased to 5,459 out of 15,351 cases identified in a total of eight countries since the outbreak started in West Africa late last year.

While the rate of transmission in Guinea and Liberia has slowed, Sierra Leone is still reporting a high incidence of transmission, the WHO added.

Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressed concerns over the spread of Ebola in the African sate of Mali and announced that the international body was expanding its Ebola emergency mission to the country in a bid to prevent further outbreaks.

"Decisive national action combined with international support today will help to prevent a spread of the outbreak in Mali to crisis proportions tomorrow,” he said.

The UN chief further called on the international community “to stay engaged” to help “contain and end the outbreak by the middle of next year."

David Nabarro, UN special envoy on Ebola, also noted that a total of USD 1.5 billion was required through next March to fight the epidemic.

Ebola is a form of hemorrhagic fever with symptoms such as diarrhea, vomiting, and bleeding.

The virus spreads through direct contact with infected blood, feces or sweat. It can be also spread through sexual contact or the unprotected handling of contaminated corpses.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20141124/us-med-healthbeat-health-security-55dcda6fb3.html

US looking past Ebola to prepare for next outbreak

Nov 24, 4:17 AM (ET)
By LAURAN NEERGAARD

(AP) In this Sept. 18, 2014 file photo, a Nigerian port health official uses a...
Full Image

WASHINGTON (AP) — The next Ebola or the next SARS. Maybe even the next HIV. Even before the Ebola epidemic in West Africa is brought under control, public health officials are girding for the next health disaster.

"It's really urgent that we address the weak links and blind spots around the world," Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told The Associated Press. "Ebola is a powerful reminder that a health threat anywhere can affect us."

Ebola sprang from one of those blind spots, in an area that lacks the health systems needed to detect an outbreak before it becomes a crisis. Now the Obama administration has requested $600 million for the CDC to implement what it calls the Global Health Security Agenda, working with an international coalition to shore up disease detection in high-risk countries and guard against the next contagion.

There's little doubt there will be a next time. Just in recent years, the world has seen bird flu sicken people in Southeast Asia, the respiratory killer SARS spread from China, the 2009 flu pandemic, growing threats from antibiotic-resistant germs, and SARS' new cousin in the Middle East named MERS.

(AP) In this Oct. 16, 2014 file photo, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention...
Full Image
And what if the next bug spills across borders even more easily than Ebola?

If bird flu ever mutates to spread between people, "we better look out. It will make Ebola look like a picnic," Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, warned a recent Senate Appropriations Committee as he questioned whether $600 million was enough to do the job.

After all, less than 20 percent of countries have reported meeting World Health Organization requirements showing they are adequately prepared to respond to emerging infectious threats.

The Obama administration kicked off the global health security project in February at a White House meeting with representatives of more than two dozen countries — unaware that Ebola already was quietly brewing in Guinea. Additional countries signed on in later meetings in Finland and Indonesia, and again at the White House in September, where President Barack Obama declared the world must "make sure we're not caught flat-footed" in future outbreaks.

For its part in the international collaboration, the U.S. plans to assist at least 30 countries over the next five years to bolster local disease prevention and monitoring, improve laboratory diagnosis of pathogens and strengthen emergency response to outbreaks.

Consider Uganda, where in 2010 a lack of a good laboratory system was one reason it took "a shockingly long" 40 days to determine a mysterious outbreak was yellow fever, said CDC scientist Jeff Borchert.

Last year, CDC began a pilot project to improve Uganda's disease detection by piggybacking on a small program that tested babies born to HIV-positive mothers. Now, in a larger swath of the country, motorcycles race samples from sick patients to provincial capitals where they're shipped overnight to a central lab to test for a variety of diseases. The health ministry also set up an emergency operations center to oversee potential outbreaks.

In March, Uganda's new system proved itself, Borchert said, as the country fought an outbreak of nearly 200 cases of meningitis, using that network for testing of patients in remote areas. And last month, in an another example of its overall preparedness, Ugandan officials rapidly tracked down contacts of a health worker who died of Marburg virus, an Ebola relative, a case that fortunately didn't spread.

CDC has long trained public health workers in various countries to be disease detectives, but the international collaboration is supposed to be more comprehensive. Even before receiving any new funding, CDC started some additional small projects in countries such as India, Thailand, Jordan, Vietnam and Georgia, to expand outbreak-fighting capabilities.

Then came Ebola. While the outbreak stalled work on broader global health security, it also increased awareness of the ripple effect that one unprepared country can have.

Lawmakers want to know if the U.S. will leave Ebola-ravaged Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea with health systems more capable of responding to future outbreaks.

"Liberia is a country where they tell me that their electricity output is such that it would have trouble powering the Jumbotron at Dallas stadium," said Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark. "Is this going to be something that we put in and it's going to be an ongoing cost for us, you know, forever?"

CDC will expand its Ebola-specific work, such as training rapid response teams to investigate cases, "so they're better able to detect and respond to not only Ebola but other pathogens," said Dr. Jordan Tappero, CDC's director of global health protection. "It's our intention to be there for the long-term to really build that public health capacity."

Learning to tackle one disease can pay off against another: Nearby Nigeria beat back Ebola thanks in part to its polio-fighting program that included labs and CDC-trained disease detectives who quickly switched gears to the new threat.

Scary outbreaks often spark calls for better global preparedness that fade as the disease does.

"We should avoid a cycle in which we let our guard down once the immediate public health crisis passes," Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said last week.

CDC's Frieden offered hindsight: "The world would be a very different place today if Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone had had those systems in place a year ago. They could have contained this outbreak."
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The situation in Mali continues to get worse.


http://www.medicaldaily.com/mali-reports-new-ebola-case-linked-dead-nurse-311872


The Grapevine
Mali Reports New Ebola Case, Linked To Dead Nurse
Nov 23, 2014 09:40 AM By Reuters
Health Worker
Children watch as a health worker sprays disinfectants outside a mosque in Bamako November 14, 2014. REUTERS/Joe Penney
Comment

BAMAKO (Reuters) - Mali has recorded a new case of Ebola in the capital Bamako after the friend of a nurse who died of the hemorrhagic fever earlier this month tested positive for the disease, health and medical officials said on Saturday.

The nurse contracted the disease after treating an imam from neighboring Guinea, who died after being incorrectly diagnosed with kidney problems. This allowed Ebola to spread to five other people in the West African nation's second outbreak.

"Of two suspected cases tested, one was negative and the other positive. The latter was placed in an isolation center for intensive treatment," a statement from the health ministry said, adding that another 310 contact cases were being monitored.

Two Malian medical officials, who asked not to be named, confirmed the relationship between the new case and the deceased nurse.

A total of 5,459 people have died in the worst Ebola outbreak on record, according the World Health Organization (WHO). Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia account for all but 15 of them.

Of the six previously known cases of the disease in Mali, all have died, the WHO said on Friday.



(Reporting by Colin Baker, Tiemoko Diallo and Adama Diarra; Writing by Joe Bavier; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
Comment
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Oops, looks like Italy is being added to the mix. They are flying back an infected Doctor from Africa.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/ebola/11250747/Italys-first-case-of-Ebola-confirmed.html


Italy's first case of Ebola confirmed
Doctor who was working with patients near Freetown with Ebola patients is back in Italy for treatment
An health worker from Guinea's Red Cross wearing a Personal Protective Equipments (PPE) leaves the house of a victim of the Ebola virus
A health worker wearing a Personal Protective Equipments (PPE) leaves the house of a victim of the Ebola virus Photo: EPA

By Andrea Vogt, Bologna

3:51PM GMT 24 Nov 2014

An Italian doctor who contracted Ebola while working in Sierra Leone is being repatriated to Italy for treatment, health officials in Rome confirmed on Monday.

The doctor had been working since October 18 at a small clinic about 10 miles west of capital of Freetown with the humanitarian group Emergency before developing a fever, testing positive for the virus and being isolated, according to Italian reports.

Italian Health Ministry officials said the doctor was in a stable condition, did not have a fever during the night and was eating and drinking autonomously.

The Italian Air Force is transporting the doctor back to Italy on a special biocontainment flight Monday for treatment in the Lazzaro Spallanzani infectious diseases institute in Rome, the ministry said.

Health Minister Beatrice Lorenzin said all preventative measures were in place to guarantee maximum security for the doctor’s transport, treatment and recovery.
Related Articles
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
UN THROWS IN THE TOWEL

:eek:

This is what is known as redefining success! The powers that be are admitting, one press conference at a time, Ebola is totally out of control in Africa. The endless feel good press conferences are now impaling themselves on an Ebola epidemic that is spreading rapidly into areas that were Ebola free as recently as one month ago.



http://www.aljazeera.com/news/afric...ill-not-be-fully-met-2014112418512630314.html

UN: Deadline to curb Ebola will not be met
UN response mission says increasing infections in Sierra Leone will make it hard to meet December 1 deadline.
Last updated: 24 Nov 2014 22:12



Despite progress in Liberia, new infections have been reported in Sierra Leone [EPA]

A deadline of December 1 to contain the Ebola virus will not be fully met due to escalating numbers of cases in Sierra Leone and elsewhere, the UN Ebola Emergency Response Mission which had set the target, said.

The mission set the goal in September, seeking to have 70 percent of Ebola patients under treatment and 70 percent of Ebola victims safely buried. That target will be achieved in some areas, head of UNMEER Anthony Banbury told Reuters news agency, citing progress in Liberia.
Infographic: Just how deadly is Ebola?

"We are going to exceed the December 1 targets in some areas. But we are almost certainly going to fall short in others. In both those cases, we will adjust to what the circumstances are on the ground," he said in an interview.

Banbury said the areas of greatest concern are in rural parts of Sierra Leone as well as the city of Makeni in the centre of the country and Port Loko in the northwest.

Improving surveillance

Surveillance to prevent further cross-border spread of the disease must be improved, he added, given the transmission of the disease overland from Guinea into Mali, where at least six people have now died.

The death toll in the worst Ebola epidemic on record has risen to 5,459 out of 15,351 cases identified in eight countries by the end of Nov. 18, the World Health Organization said on Friday. The vast majority of those cases are in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

US Brigadier General Frank Tate, deputy commanding general of US forces helping Liberia fight the epidemic said on Monday that there has been dramatic improvement in the situation in the country considered the worst-hit by the outbreak.

Meanwhile, an Italian doctor who has been working in Sierra Leone has tested positive for the Ebola virus and is being transferred to Rome for treatment, the health ministry said Monday. It is Italy's first confirmed case of Ebola.

The doctor, who was not identified and who works for the non-governmental organization Emergency, is scheduled to arrive overnight in Italy for treatment at the Lazzaro Spallanzani National Institute for Infectious Diseases in Rome.
Source:
Agencies
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
They have to overcome centuries of beliefs in witchcraft, curses, war, government, islam, getting intimate with the dead, and focus strictly on science.
If .gov had spread science full force since beginning maybe they would have a chance, but their .govs are notoriously corrupt.
Wait until Ebola hits the slums of Cairo.
 

MtnGal

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Our local news Asheville, NC just said two people quarantined in home in county for possible Ebola. No link yet, more at 11.

From what I can tell a health worker who returned has been quarantined in their home. Same as the nurse they are screaming they are being treated like a criminal.
 
Last edited:

libtoken

Veteran Member
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-30191938

25 November 2014 Last updated at 05:33 ET

Ebola outbreak: Sierra Leone workers dump bodies in Kenema

Burial workers in the Sierra Leonean city of Kenema have dumped bodies in public in protest at non-payment of allowances for handling Ebola victims. The workers, who have gone on strike over the issue, left 15 bodies abandoned at the city's main hospital. One of the bodies was reportedly left by the hospital manager's office and two others by the hospital entrance.
(snip)
The workers told a BBC reporter they had not been paid agreed extra risk allowances for October and November.

The BBC's Umaru Fofana in Freetown says the bodies have now been taken away but the workers remain on strike.
(snip)
 

nuance4u

Contributing Member
First flight of quarantined troops from West Africa to arrive Tuesday at JBLM

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/11/24/3506558/first-flight-of-quarantined-troops.html?sp=/99/289/&ihp=1

A group of military service members coming home from recent missions in Liberia will spend the next few weeks in a containment area at Joint Base Lewis-McChord while the Army monitors their health for signs of Ebola infection, the Army announced Monday.

The group includes 15 military service members and one Defense Department civilian who recently worked to build facilities in Liberia that will support the Pentagon’s effort to tamp down the spread of the fatal disease. They were expected to arrive Tuesday at McChord Airfield.

The members of the group have not been exposed to Ebola-infected patients, I Corps Maj. Mary Ricks said.

“The risk of them being exposed (to the disease) is very minimal,” Ricks said.

The Pentagon earlier this month named JBLM as one of five domestic military bases that will be used to temporarily house troops coming out of missions in West Africa.

The Defense Department wants to keep them quarantined from civilians for the duration of the Ebola disease’s 21-day incubation period. The troops arriving at JBLM on Tuesday have spent some time in Germany since leaving Liberia and are not expected to be at JBLM for the full 21 days.

About 2,600 military service members are stationed in West Africa, building and operating 17 Ebola-treatment facilities.

The disease has infected about 15,300 people and killed 5,459, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Protection.

The group of military service members arriving at JBLM contains troops who are not stationed at the South Sound base. They are mostly soldiers and airmen from different military bases around the country.

The base is preparing a Thanksgiving dinner for the quarantined troops. They’ll be served a holiday meal in a dining area within the containment zone, Ricks said.

JBLM could house as many as 1,000 quarantined military service members in barracks that were used until recently for summertime ROTC exercises.

The barracks have been spruced up with new gym equipment and Wi-Fi connections.

“All the amenities they’d have at another installation, they’ll have there,” Ricks said.

Adam Ashton: 253-597-8646 adam.ashton@thenewstribune.com @TNTMilitary

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/...d-troops.html?sp=/99/289/&ihp=1#storylink=cpy
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/and-sky-in-your-world-is.html

Monday, November 24, 2014
And The Sky In Your World Is...?

ACCRA (Reuters) - The U.N. Ebola Emergency Response Mission will not fully meet its Dec. 1 target for containing the virus due to escalating numbers of cases in Sierra Leone, Anthony Banbury, the head of UNMEER, said on Monday.
The mission set the goal in September of having 70 percent of Ebola patients under treatment and 70 percent of victims safely buried. That target will be achieved in some areas, Banbury told Reuters, citing progress in Liberia.
"We are going to exceed the Dec 1 targets in some areas.

This is like blaming 9/11 on some guy using his cellphone and causing the airplanes to hit the WTC.

It's ludicrous.

As noted here Saturday, even the NYTimes has WHO admitting that they're so far from their goal they don't expect to come close until the middle of next year (at which point they'll probably tell us a new fairytale story).

Baghdad Banbury obviously hasn't been paying attention.

Which probably has more to do with why this outbreak hasn't been and won't be controlled than the number of Quarantine Death Centers they have or haven't built in Ebolaville.

The bloom is off that rose, and the people aren't going to them. They're sitting in their hovels and passing Ebola around the neighborhood, because they realize can do nothing just as well as the governments can, except that doing it at home takes out their whole family, and the one next door.

Even illiterates in Monrovia aren't lining up to go die alone in a government plastic-sheet hospital for the good of humanity.

The WHO and UNEERM missed their goals because to little too late, and there probably aren't enough available resources in the entire world to catch this outbreak there now.

And we expected blithering idiots like this clown to know what they were doing.

"Hey, you fu*ked up: you trusted us. I'd advise you to start drinking heavily."

Posted by Aesop at 6:50 PM
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/denial-in-mali-not-just-river-in-egypt.html

Monday, November 24, 2014
Denial In Mali, Not Just A River In Egypt

BAMAKO (Reuters) - Mali said on Monday that another person had tested positive for the Ebola virus, bringing the total number of cases in the West African nation to eight.

The Malian government did not provide further details about the new case and how the person contracted the disease, but it came after another case was confirmed on Saturday.
I
t said both cases were at an Ebola treatment center.

If you're keeping score at home, it's doubled there three times in 6 weeks. True to form, mostly among health care workers, which their nation doesn't have a plethora of to begin with. And those are just the exposures they think they know about. And their borders are still wide open to Guinea and Liberia, because they're a land-locked nation.

That works both ways, which must be a great comfort to those in the additional 5 countries they border on with no Ebola outbreak - yet.

"Wait, you're coming from WHERE?"


Posted by Aesop at 7:05 PM
Labels: Ebola
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.wired.com/2014/11/feds-stockpiling-ebola-survivors-plasma-treat-future-patients/

The US Is Stockpiling Ebola Survivors’ Plasma to Treat Future Patients
By Katie M. Palmer
11.24.14 |
6:30 am |

Emory University Hospital will begin stockpiling blood plasma from Ebola survivors, treated with a pathogen inactivation system that’s never been used before in the United States, the company that developed the technology announced on Friday. So far, the US has had some amazing success in curing Ebola, possibly thanks to experimental plasma treatments. Drawn from survivors, the stuff comes enriched in antibodies that could help to fight off the disease—but it also has the potential to carry other diseases, like malaria, that are common in west Africa where Ebola is raging. The new system will kill off any extra contaminants that may be lurking in this potentially live-saving serum.

It’s the same one, Cerus Corporation’s Intercept system, that will be used in a Gates Foundation-funded study of Ebola treatments in West Africa. The pathogen-killing molecule at the heart of the system is amotosalen, part of a class of three-ringed molecules called psoralens. They’re the compounds in lime that cause what some doctors call “Mexican beer dermatitis”: Get a squirt of the citrus on your skin when you push it into your Corona, spend a few hours on the beach in the sunlight, and the molecules interact with the UV rays to give you a nasty rash.
Cerus Intercept caption TK

Cerus’ Intercept system activates a molecule with UV light to destroy genetic material in pathogens. Cerus Corporation

Amotosalen doesn’t cause dermatitis, but it works by the same mechanism. When technicians add it to blood plasma, it nestles in the middle of DNA and RNA helices, linking the bases on either side. Then, activated by a burst of UV light, it irreversibly bonds to those bases—so the genetic material can’t replicate any more. Pathogens, inactivated.

Europe has long used blood purification systems—Intercept was first approved eight years ago, and there are other techniques, too. But the FDA has been slow to approve the same technology in the US, mostly, it seems, for lack of demand. Last week the agency approved the technique for restricted use in treating the plasma of Ebola survivors.

We already screen donated blood for several common contaminants: infectious diseases like hepatitis, West Nile, and Chagas disease. (The Red Cross also screens for HIV, but unfortunately the FDA still prohibits gay men from donating blood.) Those screens mean it’s very safe to use donated blood in the United States. But that can change when new diseases enter the pipeline—ones that we don’t test for, or ones that we don’t even know exist.

For the FDA, the tipping point might have been two diseases that are new to the US, Chikungunya and dengue. As temperatures rise, mosquitoes migrate northwards, carrying diseases that have historically been stuck in warmer, tropical countries. So in October, the FDA approved the Intercept system for use in areas like Florida and Texas where the mosquito-borne diseases are becoming a problem. (Nobody’s used the treated plasma yet.) Because they’re so uncommon here, we don’t test for those two diseases, or malaria. But soon, testing may not be enough.

“There’s an increasing realization that it’s challenging to be proactive about epidemics with our current testing paradigm,” said William ‘Obi’ Greenman, Cerus’ president and chief executive officer. We may be confronting enough new pathogens in this rapidly changing climate of ours that inactivation will become necessary to keep our blood supply safe. If so, the FDA is ready; Greenman says they’re likely to decide whether to approve the Intercept system to treat all donated plasma in the next several months.

Editor’s note: this story has been amended to reflect that Emory University Hospital and not the FDA will be stockpiling treated plasma from Ebola patients.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandso...gs-in-liberia-cases-disappear-into-the-jungle

As Ebola Ping-Pongs In Liberia, Cases Disappear Into The Jungle

November 25, 2014 Kelly Mcevers

There's a new phase of Ebola in Liberia. Epidemiologists call it ping-ponging.

Back in March, the disease was found in the rural areas. Then as people came to the capital to seek care, it started growing exponentially there. Now, some sick people are going back to their villages, and the disease has ping-ponged to the rural areas again.

So that's where we're headed — into the hot, thick jungle of Liberia to investigate a new Ebola hotspot.

Our day with the team of Ebola investigators starts at 3 a.m. The team has been told there's a woman with Ebola out there who hasn't been treated. She could be spreading the disease.

We drive five hours from Liberia's capital, Monrovia, and stop at a small, rural clinic that looks something more like a house with a few rooms and no electricity. The team has people from the World Health Organization, the African Union, Doctors Without Borders, and the Liberian Ministry of Health.

At the clinic, the head nurse says she has also heard the rumors of a sick woman. But the nurse hasn't seen her. The nurse shows us a hand-drawn map on the wall of where we need to go to find the woman. Our destination, she says, is a village called Fermaneeta.

It's the last village at the end of a thin black line on the map. A thin black line means the only way to get there is to walk, down a long footpath into the jungle. Fours hours each way.

As we walk, Mutaawe Lubogo from the African Union says there are several options for the woman if she has symptoms. If she's very sick, they can help set up a community quarantine in the village and try to come back the next day with supplies.

If the woman is still in the early stages of Ebola, she can walk back to the clinic, where an ambulance can pick her up.

Lubogo is from Uganda and worked on the 2007 Ebola outbreak there.

"You're talking to someone who has seen it before." Lubogo says. But in Uganda, Ebola was confined to the rural areas, and that's where it ended. In Liberia, there's ping-ponging.

"If I fall sick, I have to come to the rural area, where I have my parents, to my family to give me care," Lubogo says.

This is how ping-ponging works, he says. People go back and forth between the city where there's commerce, and the village where there's family. And a few of them take Ebola with them.

Out where we're walking, a village is basically a clearing in the jungle, with 10 or 20 huts. The walls of the huts are made of mud; the roofs are made of branches and leaves. Each village has a well, a fire pit for cooking and small fields nearby to grow food.

Each village is about an hour from the next one. At the fourth one, we find a clue. The team meets a man who people say is a traditional healer — he rubs herbs on sick people. He supposedly cared for the woman who's rumored to have Ebola.

The team lists off the names of people who have tested positive for Ebola. The man says he knows a lot of them. But he denies that he's a healer. He won't even admit that he has touched or treated any of them.

This is called contact tracing. If you're doing it in Dallas, Texas, you get addresses and phone numbers. Out here it's different. We leave the man and keep on walking. We finally make it to the village where the woman is supposed to be.

At first, the village is pretty quiet. There's laundry drying in the sun. People start to gather around the team. They put their hands in the air, as if they're being accused of something. Then they all start talking at once.

The group is standing in front of a wooden door to a hut where the woman who's thought to have Ebola stays. The door is closed. No one is opening the door.

The people in the village say the woman is gone. Many members of the Ebola team think the villagers are hiding something. Maybe the sick woman is behind that door. Maybe she has already died. If she has or had Ebola, in any case, she is very contagious.

County health officer Emmanuel Dweh warns people not to hide a sick person. If they do, he says, they will get sick themselves. But the people are adamant that the woman isn't there. After that, there's not much more for the team to do.

So we start back out into the jungle. It's four more hours back to the clinic.

On the way, we pick up the man thought to be the traditional healer because he treated and touched people with Ebola. He has agreed to come with us.

"We have to make the monkey bridge by dark," Dweh keeps telling us. That's the last bridge, the biggest bridge. It's two bamboo poles over a dark muddy river.

Once we get to the clinic, the plan is to have an ambulance take the alleged traditional healer to a stadium where health workers monitor people who might have Ebola. If he doesn't show signs of Ebola after 21 days, he'll be let go.

But that night, the road to the clinic goes out and the ambulance can't reach the traditional healer. The man who might have Ebola goes back to his village.

This is why it's so difficult to stop Ebola. These places are very hard to reach. The roads are bad. There's no electricity, no phone coverage.

And once you finally get to where you're going, you have no idea what you're going to find.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/24/us-health-ebola-mali-idUSKCN0J828420141124

Mali confirms eighth Ebola case, monitoring 271 people

Niv 24, 2014

Mali said on Monday that another person had tested positive for the Ebola virus, bringing the total number of cases in the West African nation to eight.

Mali is the sixth West African country to be hit by the worst outbreak on record of deadly haemorrhagic fever that has killed some 5,459 since the first case was recorded early this year in neighboring Guinea.

The Malian government did not provide further details about the new case and how the person contracted the disease, but it came after another case was confirmed on Saturday.

It said both cases were at an Ebola treatment center.

The government said in a situation report that 271 people who may have come in contact with Ebola cases were being monitored.

Of the six previously known cases of the disease in Mali, all have died, the World Health Organization said on Friday.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://outbreaknewstoday.com/mali-ebola-update-72298/

Mali Ebola update

November 25, 2014

Mali’s Ministry of Health has confirmed an additional 2 new cases of Ebola virus disease. The first, confirmed on 22 November, occurred in the 23-year-old fiancée of the 25-year-old nurse who attended the Grand Imam from Guinea (the index case in this outbreak) and died of Ebola on 11 November.

The young woman developed symptoms on 19 November and, on 20 November, was hospitalized in isolation at Bamako’s Ebola treatment centre, a new facility which opened last week.

Because of her association with the nurse, most of her close contacts were already under surveillance. Her case was detected early in the disease course. Her quick isolation has further reduced opportunities for community exposures.

The second new case is part of a family of previously confirmed and deceased patients. The 27-year-old man lost his mother and half-brother to Ebola.

He developed symptoms on 19 November and was admitted for treatment at the new facility on 24 November. Laboratory confirmation was received the same day.

The identification of patient contacts for daily monitoring has reportedly reached 99%. Based on experiences in Senegal and Nigeria, this achievement could augur well for rapid containment of Mali’s outbreak.

Collaboration with health officials in Guinea

To date, all 7 cases in this second wave of infections can be linked to contact with an Imam who developed symptoms on 17 October in his native village of Kourémalé, Guinea, and arrived in Bamako on 25 October for treatment at the Pasteur Clinic.

His case has been classified as a Guinea case as he developed symptoms there. After his death on 27 October, his body was returned to Kourémalé for a funeral the following day that attracted a large number of mourners.

These events ignited additional chains of transmission in Guinea, including several deaths, which are currently under investigation by WHO epidemiologists. Most of these patients had symptom onset in early to mid-November, indicating ongoing chains of transmission.

With WHO support, staff from Mali’s Ministry of Health will be meeting with health officials from Guinea to discuss cross-border measures for coordinating control efforts and reducing the likelihood that additional cases will be imported from Guinea into Mali.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
It is now clear WHO's delusional rantings about the "decline in Ebola cases in Liberia" was based on denial, wishful thinking and the kind of arrogant negligence they have been famous for during the entire Ebola epidemic.


http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandso...course-in-liberia-will-the-u-s-military-adapt


Ebola Is Changing Course In Liberia. Will The U.S. Military Adapt?
November 25, 2014 5:59 PM ET
Kelly McEvers
Kelly McEvers
Listen to the Story



A helicopter's eye view of a new ETU, funded by USAID and built by Save the Children.

A helicopter's eye view of a new ETU, funded by USAID and built by Save the Children.
Kelly McEvers/NPR

The Ebola outbreak started in rural areas, but by June it had reached Liberia's capital, Monrovia.

By August, the number of people contracting the Ebola virus in the country was doubling every week. The Liberian government and aid workers begged for help.

Enter the U.S. military, who along with other U.S. agencies had a clear plan in mid-September to build more Ebola treatment units, or ETUs. At least one would be built in the major town of each of Liberia's 15 counties. That way, sick patients in those counties wouldn't bring more Ebola to the capital.
Air Force personnel put up tents to house a 25-bed, U.S.-built hospital for Liberian health workers sick with Ebola in Monrovia, Liberia's capital. The hospital is scheduled to open this weekend.
Goats and Soda
U.S. Military Response To Ebola Gains Momentum In Liberia
US soldiers have intervened in during natural disasters such as the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. But a disease outbreak is more complicated.
Goats and Soda
Can The U.S. Military Turn The Tide In The Ebola Outbreak?

But it's taken a long time to build these ETUs; most won't be done until the end of the year. And now the spread of Ebola changing — clusters are popping up in remote rural areas. So building a huge treatment center in each county's main town may no longer make sense.

Two hours outside the capital, the Army's 36th Engineer Brigade just finished erecting an ETU last week. Lt. Abraham Richardson shows me around, first giving me a tour of the triage building where all patients will arrive. Then he leads me to four giant white tents inside what health workers call the "hot zone."

"That's where all the confirmed cases will be," Richardson says. Each tent will house about 25 patients.

This is what the military is good at: landing in a place they've never been and building stuff. But some say the size of the ETUs is a problem.

Because it's taken so long to build the centers, their relatively large size is no longer useful, says Dr. Darin Portnoy, who's with Doctors Without Borders. He's just finished caring for two sick children at one of the organization's original ETUs back in Monrovia.

"ETUs are not needed right now at the same level," he says. "Right now the construction should be scaled down — fewer beds."

"Take the amazing capacity that has been brought to bear and direct [it] elsewhere," he adds.

By elsewhere, Portnoy means remote rural areas, where, sometimes, the only way to reach people is by walking for hours or taking a canoe. He says big international donors should support so-called rapid response teams that go out, find those hard-to-reach people and set up small treatment centers where they actually live.

"Just because you have a plan ... doesn't mean you have to continue on that plan," he says.

The U.S. has started to scale down its plan, building only 15 ETUs instead of the 17 originally planned. Some ETUs will now have 50 beds instead of 100. And instead of sending 4,000 troops to West Africa to build facilities and train health workers, the military says that number will now be closer to 3,000.
Maj. Gen. Gary Volesky, who commands U.S. forces in Liberia, wants to be sure the military has an exit plan. i

Maj. Gen. Gary Volesky, who commands U.S. forces in Liberia, wants to be sure the military has an exit plan.
Kelly McEvers/NPR

The military is also helping to locate Ebola cases in remote areas. Just last week, says Maj. Gen. Gary Volesky, who commands the U.S. forces in Liberia, the military gave a team of epidemiologists a ride in a helicopter to a remote village north of the capital to find Ebola victims.

But Volesky says he wants to know the military has an exit plan, and that someone else will take over the jobs that the U.S. troops have been doing.

A few hours north of the capital, at one of the busiest ETUs in Liberia, custodian John Jameson shows us the burial ground full of fresh mounds of dirt. "Three, four, five burials a day," he says.

The ones buried here were those who could make it to the ETU. Health officials say many more people are getting sick and dying in remote rural areas, which means Ebola will keep spreading.
 
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