Doctors Without Borders has described the Ebola epidemic sweeping across West Africa as “out of control.” The Ebola virus, which is fatal in 90% of cases, has killed more than 670 people in West Africa & spread to 60 locations in 4 countries. The obstacles to bringing the virus under control are formidable, among them a shortage of medical resources & resistance from local communities terrified by a disease they do not understand.
The current outbreak began in Guinea in March. Sierra Leone is now the epicenter of the epidemic. The situation is deteriorating rapidly in Liberia. On Friday, a man died of an Ebola infection in Lagos, Nigeria.
Nurses & doctors are also falling victim to the disease. 2 American aid workers have tested positive, & a doctor at Liberia’s largest hospital, the John F. Kennedy Memorial Medical Center in Monrovia, has died of the disease. The virus is amplified by a mobile population, especially across the shared borders between Guinea, Sierra Leone & Liberia. In the Nigerian case, the infected victim entered on a passenger flight from Liberia. The World Health Organization & the Nigerian government have shut down the hospital where the man died, & other passengers on the flight are being tracked down & tested.
Infected individuals must be isolated in health centers to prevent the virus from spreading to others & to give them the care they need. Bodies of victims must also be disposed of w/care: The virus, present in bodily fluids, including sweat, is most infectious at the end-stage. Then there is widespread ignorance among the most vulnerable populations about what needs to be done. The result is that many people are hiding sick loved ones at home & transporting bodies for burial w/no understanding of the precautions they must take.
Liberia’s president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, has declared a national Ebola emergency. The governments of Guinea, Sierra Leone & Nigeria must also act w/equal urgency to raise public awareness, put additional trained medical personnel on the ground & trace patients’ contacts w/others. The current Ebola outbreak is more than a sum of national emergencies. It is now a regional crisis, & the whole of West Africa must act to contain it.
The current outbreak began in Guinea in March. Sierra Leone is now the epicenter of the epidemic. The situation is deteriorating rapidly in Liberia. On Friday, a man died of an Ebola infection in Lagos, Nigeria.
Nurses & doctors are also falling victim to the disease. 2 American aid workers have tested positive, & a doctor at Liberia’s largest hospital, the John F. Kennedy Memorial Medical Center in Monrovia, has died of the disease. The virus is amplified by a mobile population, especially across the shared borders between Guinea, Sierra Leone & Liberia. In the Nigerian case, the infected victim entered on a passenger flight from Liberia. The World Health Organization & the Nigerian government have shut down the hospital where the man died, & other passengers on the flight are being tracked down & tested.
Infected individuals must be isolated in health centers to prevent the virus from spreading to others & to give them the care they need. Bodies of victims must also be disposed of w/care: The virus, present in bodily fluids, including sweat, is most infectious at the end-stage. Then there is widespread ignorance among the most vulnerable populations about what needs to be done. The result is that many people are hiding sick loved ones at home & transporting bodies for burial w/no understanding of the precautions they must take.
Liberia’s president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, has declared a national Ebola emergency. The governments of Guinea, Sierra Leone & Nigeria must also act w/equal urgency to raise public awareness, put additional trained medical personnel on the ground & trace patients’ contacts w/others. The current Ebola outbreak is more than a sum of national emergencies. It is now a regional crisis, & the whole of West Africa must act to contain it.