A picture taken in Oshodi Heritage park in Lagos on October 20, 2014
shows an electronic information board on Ebola reading in pidgin English
"No Shaking! We go Chase Ebola Comot", which means "No cause for worry,
we will chase Ebola away". Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, was
on Monday declared officially Ebola-free but warned that it remained
vulnerable as long as the virus was raging elsewhere in West Africa. AFP
| PHOTO
CONAKRY
The highly contagious
Ebola virus, which has killed more than 4,500 people in west Africa
since December and has fuelled global alarm, is among the most dangerous
ever identified.
Like
Aids, which began in Kinshasa in the 1920s before spreading worldwide,
according to a recent study, Ebola was first identified in central
Africa.
The tropical virus was named after a river in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where it came to light in 1976.
Five
species have been identified to date (Zaire, Sudan, Bundibugyo, Reston
and Tai Forest), the first being the most dangerous with death rates
that have reached 90 per cent among humans.
The death
rate in the current epidemic of haemorrhagic fever is around 70 per
cent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
How is it transmitted?
The virus's natural reservoir animal is probably the bat, which does not contract the disease itself.
Chimpanzees, gorillas, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines have also been found to transmit Ebola to humans.
Only
one certified contact with an animal has been recorded in the current
outbreak, however, early on in Guinea, following which it has been
passed on among humans.
Although it is highly
contagious, Ebola is transmitted less easily than some other diseases.
An average of two people have been infected by each person who has
contracted the disease since December.
This is because
Ebola is transmitted by contact with the blood, body fluids, secretions
or organs of an infected person, but not by air.
Those
infected do not become contagious until the symptoms appear. They then
become more and more contagious until just after their death, which
poses great risks during funerals.
Following an
incubation period of between two and 21 days, five being the average
according to a Swiss study, Ebola develops into a high fever, weakness,
intense muscle and joint pain, headaches and sore throats.
That is often followed by vomiting and diarrhoea, skin eruptions, kidney and liver failure, and internal and external bleeding.
How can it be treated?
Because there is no approved drug treatment at present, patients are essentially re-hydrated.
A series of experimental treatments have nonetheless resulted in positive results among several patients.
The
best known is ZMapp, a cocktail of three monoclonal (single cell)
antibiotics developed through a Canadian/US partnership, of which
several hundred doses are expected to become available by the end of
this year.
Avignan, an anti-flu treatment developed by
the Japanese firm Toyama Chemical, could be available rapidly but it has
not yet been proven sufficiently effective against the Ebola virus.
Toyama Chemical says it has enough Avignan in stock for more than 20,000 people.
Toyama Chemical says it has enough Avignan in stock for more than 20,000 people.
Two vaccines have been deemed promising by the WHO and their development has been speeded up.
They
are the Canadian drug VSV-EBOV, of which 1,000 doses were sent to the
WHO this week, and cAd3-ZEBOV, made by the British pharmaceutical group
GlaxoSmithKline, which is not expected to be ready before 2016.
How can you protect yourself?
Ebola is best treated preventively, notably through hand-washing and using gel-or alcohol-based disinfectants.
The
required procedure is simple but must be done rigorously, and anyone
suspected of exposure must check carefully for symptoms, especially
fever.
It is recommended to keep a distance of several metres (yards) from infected people or bodies, and health-care providers must wear disposable protection clothing that includes masks and gloves.
It is recommended to keep a distance of several metres (yards) from infected people or bodies, and health-care providers must wear disposable protection clothing that includes masks and gloves.
Sites that have been contaminated must be disinfected.
How to defeat Ebola?
Patients
must first be identified through laboratory tests because the symptoms
resemble those of other diseases such as malaria. Those infected must be
isolated.
Ebola treatment centres require substantial
means: WHO estimates that it takes between 200-250 medical personnel to
safely staff a centre of 70 beds.
All people in contact
with an infected person must be closely watched for 21 days to ensure
they have not contracted the disease.
The United
Nations has estimated it will take around $1.0 billion (780 million
euros) to fight Ebola over the next six months, but less than 40 per
cent of that amount has been received so far.
The money
is needed to increase the number of available beds to 7,000 from 4,300
at present by December 1 and to provide the required number of
personnel.
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