West Africa Ebola Outbreak [11,313 dead]

CR34M3

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This is some crazy s***.

While barricading the area does have good intentions, one has to wonder whether it'll not do harm in the long run. I'm thinking 1. the disease might snowball in the contained area and get even worse or 2. out of anger the people may try and escape from the area and thus spread the disease more than what might have happend naturally.

Just speculation obviously, but it's really bad none the less.
 

techead

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if I was one of those people, and I was NOT infected, I would try get the hell out of there!

Either that, or lock myself up in my shack!! :eek:
 

LazyLion

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VIOLENCE ERUPTS IN LIBERIA'S EBOLA-HIT SLUM

Violence erupted in an Ebola quarantine zone in Liberia's capital Wednesday when soldiers opened fire and used tear gas on protesting crowds as they evacuated a state official and her family.

Four residents were injured in the clashes that flared in Monrovia's West Point slum which has been sealed off as part of new security measures aimed at containing the deadly virus.

The crackdown in Liberia comes as authorities around the world scramble to stem the worst-ever outbreak of Ebola, which has killed at least 1,350 people across west Africa this year.

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf quarantined West Point and Dolo Town, to the east of the capital, and imposed a night-time curfew as part of new drastic measures to fight the disease.

Residents of West Point, where club-wielding youths stormed an Ebola medical facility on Saturday, reacted with fury to the crackdown, hurling stones and shouting at the security forces.

"It is inhumane," resident Patrick Wesseh told AFP. "They can't suddenly lock us up without any warning, how are our children going to eat?"

Liberia, with 576 deaths from 972 diagnosed cases, has seen the biggest toll among the four west African countries hit by Ebola.

Deaths from the epidemic that has swept through west Africa since March now stand at 1,350 after a surge of 106 victims in just two days, according to the World Health Organization.

Fears that the virus could spread to other continents have seen flights to the region cancelled, and authorities around the world adopting measures to screen travellers arriving from affected nations.

Vietnam said Wednesday it had released two Nigerian air travellers from isolation after their fevers subsided. In Myanmar a local man is still undergoing tests after arriving from Guinea with a fever.

From its initial outbreak in Guinea -- where 396 people have died so far -- the virus spread to Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria, overwhelming inadequate public health services already battling common deadly diseases such as malaria.

Straining the situation even further, several top officials leading the fight have lost their lives to the disease.

A doctor who treated Nigeria's first Ebola patient was named among the dead on Tuesday, taking the death toll in Africa's most populous country to five.

The UN's new pointman on Ebola, David Nabarro, is due Thursday to begin a visit to west Africa aimed at shoring up health services in the four affected nations.

The British physician said he would focus on "revitalising the health sectors" in the affected countries, many of which have only recently emerged from years of devastating conflict.

Efforts to contain the epidemic have also run up against local distrust of outside doctors, and stories of aid workers carrying the infection.

Liberia's leader warned that local rituals were among the factors spreading the disease.

"We have been unable to control the spread due to continued denials, cultural burying practices, disregard for the advice of health workers and disrespect for the warnings by the government," Sirleaf said.

WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib noted "encouraging signs" in Nigeria and Guinea, where prevention measures and work to trace lines of infection were starting to take effect.

The Nigerian outbreak has been traced to a sole foreigner, a Liberian-American who died in late July in Lagos. All subsequent Nigerian victims had direct contact with him.

In Sierra Leone, where 374 people have died, the outbreak has also been traced back to one person: a herbalist in the remote eastern border village of Sokoma.

"She was claiming to have powers to heal Ebola. Cases from Guinea were crossing into Sierra Leone for treatment," Mohamed Vandi, the top medical official in the hard-hit district of Kenema, told AFP.

No cure or vaccine is currently available for Ebola, which is spread by close contact with body fluids, meaning patients must be isolated.

Given the extent of the crisis, the WHO has authorised largely untested treatments -- including ZMapp and the Canadian-made VSV-EBOV vaccine, whose possible side effects on humans are not known.

Three doctors in Liberia who had been given the experimental US-made ZMapp are reportedly responding to the treatment.

Researchers said Wednesday an experimental drug treatment can help monkeys survive an otherwise deadly infection with a tropical virus called Marburg, which is similar to Ebola.

Countries throughout Africa and beyond remain on high alert, with the Equatorial Guinea airline, Ceiba Intercontinental, the latest to suspend flights to the whole region.

burs/txw

Intercontinental


Source : Sapa-AFP /aw
Date : 21 Aug 2014 10:46
 

Pitbull

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Sad that it's always the people who already have the blunt end of the stick that suffers under such outbreaks. It's always the poor communities that is hit the hardest.
 

LazyLion

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MOTSOALEDI TO ANNOUNCE EBOLA MEASURES

Cabinet has decided on measures which will affect South Africans travelling to countries hardest hit by the Ebola virus, Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe said on Thursday.

"The minister of health will provide more information on this," he told reporters following Cabinet's regular Wednesday fortnightly meeting.

"I don't want to steal his thunder but the Cabinet had a thorough briefing yesterday [Wednesday] and took certain decisions that will also impact on South Africans who travel to those countries that are affected by Ebola."

Radebe said the Ebola outbreak in West Africa had featured high on the agenda.

"Cabinet was briefed by the Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi on developments around Ebola and interventions made by South Africa," Radebe said.

"Cabinet wishes to reiterate that no person has been found positive with the disease."

Motsoaledi was expected to brief media on Thursday afternoon.


Source : Sapa /cp/th/jk/lp
Date : 21 Aug 2014 11:48
 

akescpt

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MOTSOALEDI TO ANNOUNCE EBOLA MEASURES

Cabinet has decided on measures which will affect South Africans travelling to countries hardest hit by the Ebola virus, Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe said on Thursday.

"The minister of health will provide more information on this," he told reporters following Cabinet's regular Wednesday fortnightly meeting.

"I don't want to steal his thunder but the Cabinet had a thorough briefing yesterday [Wednesday] and took certain decisions that will also impact on South Africans who travel to those countries that are affected by Ebola."

Radebe said the Ebola outbreak in West Africa had featured high on the agenda.

"Cabinet was briefed by the Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi on developments around Ebola and interventions made by South Africa," Radebe said.

"Cabinet wishes to reiterate that no person has been found positive with the disease."

Motsoaledi was expected to brief media on Thursday afternoon.


Source : Sapa /cp/th/jk/lp
Date : 21 Aug 2014 11:48

not that we know of...
 

Eniigma

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West Point is a township (the administrative equivalent of a city ward) of the Liberian capital city of Monrovia, located on a peninsula which juts out into the Atlantic Ocean between the Mesurado and Saint Paul rivers. Home to approximately 75,000 people, West Point one of Monrovia's most densely populated slums.
Wiki

Fook me, if that whole slum is quarantined that's a shed load of people that could die.
 

sand_man

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Wiki

Fook me, if that whole slum is quarantined that's a shed load of people that could die.

Insane to think that there maybe 200 infected people in that slum. How do you think the other 74 800 people feel? I would be quite upset.
 

Sinbad

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Insane to think that there maybe 200 infected people in that slum. How do you think the other 74 800 people feel? I would be quite upset.

But what do you do? Those 200 could have infected 2000 who are not yet showing symptoms... Let them out, and in a week's time you have fresh patient-zeros in previously untouched areas....
 

sand_man

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But what do you do? Those 200 could have infected 2000 who are not yet showing symptoms... Let them out, and in a week's time you have fresh patient-zeros in previously untouched areas....

Catch 22 yeah...

I would imagine the community will soon ostracize anyone suspected of being infected. It's going to get very, very ugly!!

If we starting to panic 1000's of km's away I wonder what the atmosphere is like in a quarantined Ebola slum?
 

The_Unbeliever

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Can you say "Hamas tunnel"? If people are desperate enough to escape from slum hell, then they will either tunnel underground, or they will find other ways and means to escape...
 

Sinbad

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Catch 22 yeah...

I would imagine the community will soon ostracize anyone suspected of being infected. It's going to get very, very ugly!!

If we starting to panic 1000's of km's away I wonder what the atmosphere is like in a quarantined Ebola slum?

Unthinkable :(
 

Nanfeishen

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And now maybe in the DRC

(Reuters) - Democratic Republic of Congo has sent its health minister and a team of experts to the remote northern Equateur province after several people died there from a disease with Ebola-like symptoms, a local official and a professor said on Wednesday.

It was not immediately clear if there was any connection with Ebola. An epidemic of that disease has killed more than 1,200 people in Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.

"An illness is spreading in Boende but we don't know the origin," said Michel Wangi, a spokesman for the governor's office. "The government has sent a team of experts from the INRB(National Institute of Biomedical Research) this morning led by the health minister (Felix) Kabange Numbi and acting governor Sebastian Impeto."

A professor accompanying the delegation in the presidential plane confirmed that they were en route this morning to find out "the exact nature of the illness that caused the Boende deaths".

An Equateur resident who asked not to be named said that around ten people had died, including four health care workers, after suffering from fever, diarrhoea and bleeding from the ears and nostrils - all symptoms of the deadly Ebola virus.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/20/us-health-ebola-congodemocratic-idUSKBN0GK1CC20140820

Not good if its true
 

LazyLion

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Mar 17, 2005
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SA ISSUES TRAVEL BANS

Cabinet has issued a travel ban for non-South Africans from Ebola infested countries, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi said on Thursday.

He said South Africans coming from such West African countries would be questioned, and medically examined if need be.


Source : Sapa /jm/tk/lp
Date : 21 Aug 2014 15:29
 
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