Las Vegas Review-Journal

Congo will force fever checks, hand-washing

Measures a response to deadly Ebola surge

- By Krista Larson and Al-hadji Kudra Maliro The Associated Press

GOMA, Congo — Congolese soldiers and police will enforce hand-washing and fever checks now that the deadly Ebola outbreak has been declared an internatio­nal health emergency, authoritie­s said Thursday.

Soldiers and police will “force” people who resist taking the key steps to help contain the disease that has killed more than 1,600 people in the past year, said the outbreak response coordinato­r at Congo’s health ministry, Dr. Aruna Abedi.

“It’s not possible that someone refuses to wash their hands and have their temperatur­e checked at a very critical moment in this outbreak,” Abedi told reporters in Goma, the city of more than 2 million people where a first Ebola case was announced early this week. The major regional crossroads is on the Rwanda border and has an internatio­nal airport.

The World Health Organizati­on’s rare emergency declaratio­n Wednesday night for the second-worst Ebola outbreak in history came after a WHO expert committee declined on three previous occasions to recommend it, to the impatience of some health experts who for months had expressed alarm.

Congo’s increased use of soldiers and police could bring objections from some residents and health workers amid an outbreak taking place in what has been called a war zone.

This outbreak is like no other, unfolding in a turbulent part of northeaste­rn Congo where dozens of rebel groups are active and wary communitie­s had never experience­d the disease before. Health workers have faced misinforma­tion and even deadly attacks that have hampered the critical work of tracing contacts of infected people and deploying an experiment­al but effective Ebola vaccine.

Wednesday’s declaratio­n led to fears among some Congolese authoritie­s and residents that government­s might close borders or take other measures that could hurt the economy. Congo’s health minister has resisted characteri­zing the outbreak as a health emergency.

While the risk of regional spread remains high, the risk outside the region remains low, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said after Wednesday’s announceme­nt. Last month saw the first confirmed cases in Uganda and a case just 43 miles from the border with South Sudan, where a recently ended civil war badly weakened the health system.

This is the fifth such declaratio­n in history. Previous emergencie­s were declared for the devastatin­g 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa that killed more than 11,000 people, the emergence of Zika in the Americas, the swine flu pandemic and polio.

WHO defines a global emergency as an “extraordin­ary event” that constitute­s a risk to other countries and requires a coordinate­d internatio­nal response. WHO was criticized for its response to the West Africa outbreak, which it repeatedly declined to declare a global emergency until the virus was spreading in three countries and nearly 1,000 people were dead.

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