Edmonton Journal

women wash their Hands at an ebola screening station as they enter the Democratic republic of congo from rwanda. the region is trying to contain an outbreak of the ebola virus.

Nears rwanda

- Myah Ward

the second-deadliest outbreak of Ebola virus in history has become an internatio­nal public health emergency, the World health organizati­on said Wednesday, a declaratio­n that marks a new level of concern about the infection.

Who director-general tedros adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said the health group was concerned that the virus could spread outside of the democratic republic of Congo. “although there is no evidence yet of local Ebola transmissi­on in either Goma, drc, or uganda, these two events represent a concerning geographic­al expansion of the virus,” the director general said at a press conference. Goma is a city on the border with rwanda.

the outbreak began in august 2018 and has infected more than 2,300 people and killed more than 1,500, according to a July 9 Who report. In early June, a few cases were confirmed in neighbouri­ng uganda, and now the disease has reached a Congolese city near rwanda, sparking fear that one of the deadliest diseases on Earth could spread across the region.

Who officials said tuesday that there were currently no confirmed cases in uganda, despite concerns over a woman who last week crossed the border back into Congo and later died.

It’s the second-deadliest Ebola outbreak in history, after the 2013-to-2016 outbreak that killed more than 11,000 people, mostly in the West african countries of Guinea, liberia and sierra leone.

the public health emergency declaratio­n is reserved for extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, according to the Who. It can help mobilize internatio­nal response to an outbreak, provide more resources and focus government attention on the issue. the Who has rejected declaring the current outbreak an internatio­nal emergency several times, saying it would monitor the situation.

merck & Co.’s experiment­al Ebola vaccine V920 has been widely used in democratic republic of Congo since the august outbreak began. Between merck’s production in Germany and now the u.s., the new Jersey-based company is projecting a supply of about 900,000 vaccines over the next six to 18 months, said merck spokeswoma­n Pamela Eisele in an email.

merck has donated 195,000 doses to the Who for response in the democratic republic of Congo and uganda since last year, Eisele said.

these two events represent a concerning geographic­al expansion of the virus.

 ?? JOHN WESSELS / AFP / Getty IMAGES ??
JOHN WESSELS / AFP / Getty IMAGES

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