The Daily Courier

Vaccinatio­ns begin in Congo’s latest deadly Ebola outbreak

-

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Ebola vaccinatio­ns began Wednesday for Congo’s latest outbreak of the deadly virus that has already claimed at least nine lives.

Health officials have warned that containing the outbreak in North Kivu province is complicate­d by the presence of multiple armed groups vying for mineral-rich land in the northeaste­rn region that borders Uganda and Rwanda. Ebola screening of travellers at the Congo-Rwanda border was “already in high gear,” the World Health Organizati­on said.

The latest outbreak, declared Aug. 1 in Mangina village in the Mabalako health zone, is Congo’s tenth outbreak since the virus was identified in 1976.

This outbreak now has 17 confirmed Ebola cases, 27 probable cases and 47 suspected ones.

Some 36 people have died from hemorrhagi­c fever amid the outbreak, but officials said many cannot be confirmed as Ebola deaths at this point.

Three thousand doses of the Ebola vaccine are being sent from Kinshasa, the capital, and will be used first in the Mabalako health zone and in the nearby city of Beni, which has more than 680,000 people.

The first to be vaccinated are health workers, contacts of confirmed Ebola cases and their contacts in what is called a ring vaccinatio­n campaign. The strategy is the same that was used to contain the previous outbreak in Equateur province.

Ebola jumps to humans from animals including bats and monkeys. It can be spread through contact of bodily fluids of someone infected, living or dead. There is no specific treatment, and the virus can be fatal in up to 90 per cent of cases, depending on the strain.

Genetic analysis confirmed the virus strain in this latest outbreak is the Zaire one.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada