Sun.Star Pampanga

Ebola spreads to major Congo city as vaccines a concern

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Ddeploymen­t of the promising but still experiment­al Ebola vaccine , which is owned by Merck. The company keeps a stockpile of 300,000 doses, and preparing them takes months.

“We are extremely concerned about the size of the vaccine stockpile,” WHO’s emergencie­s director, Dr. Peter Salama, told the STAT media outlet in an interview this week, saying 300,000 doses is not sufficient as urban Ebola outbreaks become more common.

Health workers, contacts of Ebola victims and their contacts have received the vaccine in a “ring vaccinatio­n” approach, but in some cases all residents of hard-to-reach communitie­s have been offered it. The prospect of a mass vaccinatio­n in a major city like Butembo has raised concerns. Salama called the approach “extremely impractica­l.”

A WHO spokesman said shipments of doses arrive almost every week to ensure a sufficient supply for the ring vaccinatio­n. “No interrupti­ons of vaccine supply have occurred to date,” Tarik Jasarevic said in an email to The Associated Press. “Merck is actively working to ensure sufficient number of doses continue to be available to meet the potential demand.”

This Ebola outbreak is like no other, with deadly attacks by rebel groups forcing containmen­t work to pause for days at a time. Some wary locals have resisted vaccinatio­ns or safe burials of Ebola victims as health workers battle misinforma­tion in a region that has never encountere­d the virus before.

A “fringe population” has regularly destroyed medical equipment and attacked workers, Health Minister Dr. Oly Ilunga Kalenga told reporters on Wednesday.

The Ebola virus is spread via bodily fluids of those infected, including the dead.

The outbreak “remains serious and unpredicta­ble,” the World Health Organizati­on said in an assessment released Wednesday. Nine health zones have reported new cases in the last week, and some have been unrelated to known victims, meaning that gaps in tracking remain in a region with a dense, highly mobile population.

Thousands of people have been organized by Red Cross societies and others to go house-to-house dispelling rumors and checking on possible contacts of victims.

Dr. Fatoumata NafoTraore, Africa regional director for the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, joined one awareness campaign in the outbreak’s epicenter, Beni, this week.

The head of one family thanked her for the face-toface contact, saying he didn’t even have a radio and didn’t understand what was happening. “Ignorance is the enemy,” another resident said.

Given the years of conflict in eastern Congo, it’s essential that households trust why the health workers are there, Nafo-Traore told the AP.

While she called the insecurity “very worrying,” she said that with new tools at hand, including vaccines, “there is great hope.”

AKAR, Senegal (AP) — The second-largest Ebola outbreak in history has spread to a major city in eastern Congo, as health experts worry whether the stock of an experiment­al vaccine will stand up to the demands of an epidemic with no end in sight.

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