Sierra Leone's top Ebola doctor has died from Ebola disease, medical
officials have said.
Sheik Umar Khan was infected earlier this month and died on Tuesday at
a ward run by medical charity Doctors Without Borders in the far north
of the country.
Miatta Kargbo, Sierra Leone's health minister, called Khan a "national
hero" and praised his "tremendous sacrifice" in working to save the
lives of others.
His death comes days after Samuel Brisbane, a senior doctor at
Liberia's largest hospital, died on Saturday at an Ebola treatment
centre on the outskirts of Monrovia.
Several other medics have been infected. The aid group Samaritan's
Purse said on Saturday that a US doctor, Kent Brantly, who was working
in Liberia was also sick.
Health workers are at serious risk of contracting the disease, which
spreads through contact with bodily fluids.
Ebola has killed hundreds of people in West Africa in the worst
outbreak on record. The World Health Organisation says this 219 people
in Liberia, 319 people in Guinea and 224 in Sierra Leone have died.
Nigeria death
The disease has also killed the Liberian husband of an American woman
who had flown to Lagos, Nigeria.
The family of Patrick Sawyer, who died on July 24, had said recently
returned to the US for a visit. Health officials said his family
members were not affected.
Officials stressed people were not contagious until they showed
symptoms, and the Sawyer family left Liberia days before he fell ill.
Sawyer, a consultant for Liberia's Finance Ministry in his 40s,
collapsed on arrival at Lagos airport. He was put in isolation at the
First Consultants Hospital in Obalende.
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