På halvårsdagen giver FNs sundhedsorganisation WHO et overblik over ebolaudbruddet i Vestafrika. Den ser også tilbage på udbruddets oprindelse og redegør for årsagerne til dets historisk store omfang.
GENEVE, 23. September (WHO): On 23 March, the World Health Organization published formal notification of an outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Guinea on its website.
On 8 August, WHO declared the epidemic to be a “public health emergency of international concern.”
This assessment traces the early origins and subsequent evolution of the epidemic, and considers where we stand today, looking at current outbreaks in each affected country and some overarching trends – and surprises – in the overall epidemic. It also gives epidemiological projections of how the epidemic is likely to evolve.
Undersøger beredskabet i nabolandene
WHO is currently conducting systematic risk assessments to identify preparedness needs in neighbouring countries that are extremely worried about their susceptibility to an imported case and their capacity to respond.
The results of the assessment, which will be made public soon, will guide preparedness support provided by WHO and its many partners in the Ebola response.
Theoretically, given the speed and volume of air travel, any city with an international airport is at risk of an imported case of Ebola.
At the same time, worldwide vigilance is exceptionally high: WHO investigates around 20 to 30 rumoured cases each day. To date, all rumoured cases have been discarded.
Lille risiko i lande med velfungerende sundhedssystemer
Moreover, countries with well-developed health systems and services are unlikely to see much – if any – onward transmission of Ebola virus disease following an imported case.
As today’s assessment of the situation in Nigeria and Senegal shows, conventional control tools can be highly effective at the start of an outbreak, even under some extremely challenging conditions.
This six-month situation assessment is dedicated to the scores of health workers treating Ebola patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, who, as an expression of our innately shared human compassion, risked their lives, and lost them.
5.843 sygdomstilfælde og 2.803 døde
The cumulative number of cases and deaths, officially reported to WHO from 23 March to 22 September, is 5,843 cases and 2,803 deaths. To date, 337 health care workers have been infected, and more than 181 of them have died.
De enkelte lande
WHO gennemgår i de tre første af nedenstående artikler situationen i de tre hårdest ramte lande, Guinea, Liberia og Sierra Leone.
De sidste to artikler handler om situationen i henholdsvis Senegal og Nigeria, hvor der også har været tilfælde af ebola. Det ser dog ud til, at situationen er under kontrol i begge lande.
Den sidste artikel ser på udbruddet i DR Congo, der dog ikke umiddelbart ser ud til, at have forbindelse med udbruddet i Vestafrika.
Ground zero in Guinea: the outbreak smoulders – undetected – for more than 3 months
Liberia: misery and despair tempered by some good reasons for hope
Sierra Leone: a traditional healer and a funeral
Nigeria and Senegal: stable – for the moment
Democratic Republic of Congo: “classic” Ebola in a country experiencing its seventh outbreak