The Oklahoman

Guinea confirms 3 dead from Ebola, first cases since 2016

- By Boubacar Diallo

CONAKRY, Guinea— Health officials in Guinea on Sunday confirmed that at least three people have died from Ebola there, the first cases declared since it was one of three West African nations to fight the world's deadliest Ebola epidemic that ended five years ago.

An additional four people are confirmed with Ebola, according to a statement from the ministry of health. All seven positive cases attended the funeral of a nurse in Goueke on Feb. 1 and later showed Ebola symptoms including a fever, diarrhea, vomiting, said the ministry statement.

The government has declared an Ebola epidemic and started contact tracing and isolating suspected cases. It's also sent an emergency team to support local teams in Goueke and has accelerate­d the procuremen­t of Ebola vaccines from the World Health Organizati­on.

“I confirm it's Ebola. The results prove it,” Minister of Health Re my Lam ah told The Associated Press by phone.

The patients were tested for Ebola after showing symptoms of hemorrhagi­c fever and those who came in contact with the sick are already in isolation, said officials.

Guinea's announceme­nt comes one week after eastern Congo confirmed it also had cases. The cases are not linked.

Health experts in Guinea say these latest cases could be a major setback for the impoverish­ed nation, already battling COVID- 1 9 and which is still recovering from the previous Ebola outbreak, which killed 2,500 in Guinea where it began.

More than 11,300 people died in that outbreak which also hit the neighborin­g countries of Liberia and Sierra Leone between 2014 and 2016.

“The resurgence of Ebola is very concerning for what it could do for the people, the economy, the health infrastruc­ture,” said Dr. Krutika Kuppalli, assistant professor of medicine for infectious disease sat the Medical University of South Carolina, who was the medical director of an Ebola treatment unit in Sierra Leone during the previous outbreak.

“We're still understand­ing the repercussi­ons of the (last) outbreak on the population,” she said.

To contain the spread, the government and internatio­nal health organizati­ons must respond quickly and educate communitie­s about what's going on, said Kuppalli.

One reason the previous outbreak was so deadly was because the virus wasn't detected quickly and local authoritie­s and the internatio­nal community were slow to act when cases first popped up in a rural part of Guinea.

The epidemic' s initial patient, an 18-month-old boy from a small village, was believed to have been infected by bats, but after the case was reported in December 2013, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, it was weeks before a medical alert was issued and by then the virus had already spread and it took years to end it.

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