An ambulance transporting a potential Ebola virus carrier arrives at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid on November 21. Photo: AFP
The European Commission called on Wednesday for 5000 doctors to be sent from European Union states to combat west Africa’s Ebola epidemic, a European source with knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.
“The situation is too serious and it needs an immediate response,” the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said, adding that senior EU officials were in contact with national governments to mobilise the response.
“Thousands of other medical caregivers were also being called for,” the source said.
In a tweet, EU Health Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis said he had so far reached 14 EU ministers, urging them to send more medical staff to Ebola-hit countries.
“Positive responses,” he added, without providing more details.
The source said the EU’s Ebola coordinator, Christos Stylianides, was also reaching out to ministers, with more funds and logistic materials on the list of demands.
European officials were casting a wide net, asking for both medical staff directly from national authorities as well as volunteers operating through charities.
Earlier this month, Andriukaitis and Stylianides took part in a joint trip to the three worst hit West African countries: Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
Upon their return, the officials made an immediate call for epidemiologists to do more to diagnose and track the disease’s progression.
The EU as a whole has so far mobilised more than one billion euros ($1.47 billion) for the fight against Ebola, including 373 million euros ($547.5 million) from the Commission, the EU’s executive arm in Brussels.
Ebola has killed nearly 5500 people and infected 15,351, mainly in west Africa, according to the latest figures from the World Health Organisation.
AFP