Sierra Leone lags in Ebola fight, but prognosis ‘very good’

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Sierra Leone does not yet have enough beds in treatment centres to isolate Ebola patients, but, overall, the tide of the disease is being turned, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

“The global response to the Ebola crisis has succeeded in turning this crisis around,” Anthony Banbury, head of the UN Ebola Emergency Response Mission, told reporters in Freetown.

“But clearly there are places that are still in serious crisis.”

WHO assistant director-general Bruce Aylward said too few Ebola beds were available in western Sierra Leone, adding that the geographical spread of Ebola in Guinea, where many beds were concentrated in just a few big centres, was “a real concern”.

But the prognosis for Sierra Leone, which will open many new facilities in the next few weeks, was “very good”, he said.

Two months ago, the United Nations set a target of having 70 per cent of Ebola victims buried safely and 70 per cent of Ebola patients treated in isolation beds within 60 days.

Those two goals were seen as the key to halting the spread of the epidemic.

Guinea and Liberia have met both targets, but some areas in Sierra Leone have still not done so, which Mr Aylward said accounted for the continued spread of the disease there.

It would be a “stretch” to hit 100 per cent of both targets by the end of the year, he said.

Some districts showing increase in Ebola, others slowing

David Nabarro, who is heading the UN response to the Ebola epidemic, said the disease was “slowing down in some districts and increasing in others”.

“The distribution changes from week to week and the situation can worsen unexpectedly,” he said.

“Our fundamental goal is to try to make sure that Ebola actually disappears and does not become a reality of life for people in West Africa or anywhere else in the world.”

The WHO said on Monday that 5,987 people had died of Ebola in the three West African countries worst hit by the epidemic – Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.

Mr Aylward said the nature of the response would shift as the spread of the disease slowed.

With beds and safe burials in place, the next problem was to overcome mistrust and traditional beliefs to ensure that people actually used them.

Meanwhile, thousands of locals have been mobilised to try to track down everyone who has had contact with each Ebola patient.

Such efforts helped shut down outbreaks in Nigeria and Senegal but the worst-hit countries still have deeply unreliable data, with Liberia erroneously adding about 1,000 deaths to the latest figures published at the weekend.

Data published at the weekend put Liberia’s death toll at 4,181, up from 3,016 two days earlier, however the deaths were wrongly ascribed to the disease.

The WHO’s new set of figures published on Monday showed Liberia with a death toll of  3,145 out of 7,635 cases as at November 28.

Reuters