The World Health Organization says "drastic action is needed" to stop the deadly Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa. It has sent teams of experts to help locals deal with the epidemic and WHO plans to meet next week to discuss how to contain it.
Relief workers on the ground said
the epidemic has hit unprecedented proportions.
"The epidemic is out of control,"
said Dr. Bart Janssens, director of operations for Doctors Without Borders.
There have been at least 600
cases and 390 deaths in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, according to a WHO
statement released Thursday. That's since the epidemic began in March, according
to the latest World Health Organization figures.
Complicating matters, these
countries have major medical infrastructure challenges and there is a real
sense of mistrust from communities there of the help that has been
sent. In Sierra Leone and Guinea, WHO has said that community members have
thrown stones at health care workers trying to investigate the outbreak.
In April, CNN Chief Medical
Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta traveled to Conakry, Guinea, to report on what
was being done to treat patients and contain the outbreak.
"It took only moments to feel the
impact of what was happening here," Gupta wrote after
landing in Conakry. "There is a lot we know about Ebola, and it scares us
almost as much as what we don't know."
Ebola outbreaks usually are
confined to remote areas, making the disease easier to contain. But this
outbreak is different; patients have been identified in 60 locations in Guinea,
Sierra Leone and Liberia.
Officials believe the wide
footprint of this outbreak is partly because of the proximity between the jungle
where the virus was first identified and cities such as Conakry. The capital in
Guinea has a population of 2 million and an international airport.
People are traveling without
realizing they're carrying the deadly virus. It can take between two and 21 days
after exposure for someone to feel sick.
The symptoms, at first, mimic the flu: headache, fever,
fatigue. What comes next sounds like something out of a horror movie:
significant diarrhea and vomiting, while the virus shuts off the blood's ability
to clot.
As a result, patients often
suffer internal and external hemorrhaging. Many die in an average of 10
days.
Doctors Without Borders, also
known as Médecins Sans Frontières, has been working to fight the epidemic since
March. The group has sent more than 300 staff members and 40 tons of equipment
and supplies to the region to help fight the epidemic.
Still, the group warns, it's not
enough.
"Despite the human resources and
equipment deployed by MSF in the three affected countries, we are no longer able
to send teams to the new outbreak sites."
The good news is that Ebola
isn't as easily spread as one may think. A patient isn't contagious -- meaning
they can't spread the virus to other people -- until they are already showing
symptoms.
Inside the isolation treatment
areas in Conakry, doctors focus on keeping the patients hydrated with IV drips
and other liquid nutrients. Health officials have urged residents to seek
treatment at the first sign of flu-like symptoms.
There is no cure or vaccine to
treat Ebola, but MSF has shown it doesn't have to be a death sentence if it's
treated early. Ebola typically kills 90% of patients. This outbreak, the death
rate has dropped to roughly 60%.
The outbreak will be considered
contained after 42 days -- twice the incubation period -- with no new Ebola
cases.
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