Las Vegas Review-Journal

WHO sending Ebola vaccines to help Congo

- The Associated Press

KINSHASA, Congo — Ebola vaccines will be shipped as quickly as possible to Congo as the number of suspected case grows, the head of the World Health Organizati­on said Friday as the agency prepared for a “worst-case scenario.”

WHO Director-general Tedros Ghebreyesu­s in a Twitter post said the agreement was made in a phone call with Congo’s health minister Thursday.

WHO still needs Congo’s final authorizat­ion, which is expected in the coming days, Dr. Peter Salama, the agency’s emergencie­s chief, told reporters in Geneva.

Two cases of Ebola have been confirmed in a remote northweste­rn part of Congo. There is no specific treatment for Ebola. A new experiment­al vaccine has been shown to be highly effective, though quantities are limited.

Congo’s health minister on Thursday announced the first death since the outbreak was declared early this week, though the hemorrhagi­c fever blamed for the death has not been confirmed as Ebola.

On Friday, the health ministry announced one new suspected case in Bikoro and a second in the Iboko health zone.

It also said it knew of three sick people in Mbandaka, the capital of Equateur province, where it is sending experts to investigat­e.

Mobile laboratori­es were being deployed to Mbandaka and Bikoro on Saturday, the ministry said.

“The problem here is that we already have three separate locations that are reporting cases that cover as much as 60 kilometers and maybe more,” Salama said. “We have three health care workers infected and one who has been reported as of yesterday as having died.”

While the risk of the latest outbreak spreading into other countries is low, nine nearby countries have been put on high alert, Salama said.

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