Thursday 2 October 2014

US Sends Medical Experts To Study How Nigeria Tamed Ebola

Stunned by the entrance of the Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, into America,
the United States' Center for Disease Control and Prevention has
despatched its personnel to study how Nigeria contained the killer
disease.

(PHOTO: HEALTH PERSONNEL IN PROTECTIVE KITS AT THE NATIONAL HOSPITAL
IN ABUJA ON TUESDAY)

The US reported on Tuesday that it has discovered a case of EVD in
Dallas, Texas, but its health officials said "the crisis is under
control and the public has nothing to fear."

A statement released by US CDC Director Tom Frieden said "it's clear
the nation needs a quick and thorough response to its first Ebola
patient"

He said although Nigeria was not completely out of the woods, "their
extensive response to a single case of Ebola shows that control is
possible with rapid, focused interventions." Apart from Nigeria, the
US will also visit Senegal to study its model.

Frieden said "the best practices in Nigeria and Senegal suggest the
U.S. should monitor all individuals who may have been exposed to Ebola
and establish a dedicated management and response system."

Senegal has had no new reported cases of Ebola since Sept. 18 while
Nigeria has not reported new ones since August 31,

US health officials are expected in Nigeria which it claimed had the
best practices in combating Ebola Virus disease which entered into
Nigeria through Liberian born American citizen Mr. Patrick Sawyer
whose index case was reported on July 20, 2014. Nigeria is expected to
officially announce today that the remaining two potential Ebola
patients will exit the 21-day observation period.

How Nigeria stopped the spread of Ebola

According to US CDC, "Nigeria's first reported case of Ebola surfaced
July 20, when Patrick Sawyer landed in Lagos from Liberia and exposed
72 other passengers to the virus. Nigeria's Health officials quickly
issued notifications and tracked everybody who may have been in
contact with Sawyer.

"Nigeria also established an Ebola Incident Management Center to
handle the potential outbreak and developed a staffing plan that
executed a social mobilization strategy that reached more than 26,000
households of people living around the contacts of Ebola patients,"

The deadly virus has killed more than 3,000 people in Sierra Leone,
Guinea and Liberia in the largest outbreak ever recorded.

How Senegal contained Ebola
Senegal confirmed its first Ebola case Aug. 29 after a man, travelling
from Guinea on Aug. 14, took ill and showed symptoms of the disease.
This prompted a quick response, including an experienced and trained
staff that was prepared to contain the Ebola outbreak. The procedure
led to the identification of 67 contacts who were placed under
quarantine, monitored for 21 days and showed no symptoms of Ebola.

Panic in America

The man who imported Ebola into US was found to have travelled to
Liberia without informing the authorities and did not disclose the
nature of his ailment to the nurse that attended to him. Reports from
Texas yesterday said that the Nurse who attended to the man has also
taken ill for Ebola in Texas.

A spokesman for Texas Health Presbyterian said the patient had walked
into a Dallas emergency room on September 26, without knowing that he
contacted the deadly virus and left after he was treated. He then
returned to the facility on September 28 where it was determined he
likely had Ebola and was isolated. He tested positive Tuesday, health
officials said.

Following the lapse on the part of the hospital officials, questions
are being asked amid panic across the country. The CDC has thus
advised that all medical facilities should ask for patients with
symptoms consistent with Ebola for their travel history.

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