The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Ebola vaccinator­s to be protected

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KINSHASA/GENEVA. — Armed escorts will be required to protect vaccinatio­n teams as they battle to contain Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the World Health Organisati­on has warned. The Ebola outbreak area in North Kivu province, classified as a level four security threat by the WHO – one of the highest set by the UN – comes amid local unrest including violence between rival militia groups. THE turmoil poses major challenges for those tasked with locating and vaccinatin­g people who may have come into contact with Ebola victims. “EVEN though we have access to the towns of Mangini and Beni, we don’t know to what extent we will be able to rely on armed escorts for broader contact tracing outside those small towns. That’s going to be a critical determinin­g factor in our ability to respond,” said spokesman Tarik Jasarevic. So far there have been 43 cases, of which 16 are confirmed; 34 people have died. THE cost of the response, said the WHO, “is likely to be significan­t”.

The one piece of good news is that the Ebola strain has been confirmed as Zaire, which is the same as that in the previous outbreak in the west of DRC. That means the vaccines, first trialled in Guinea towards the end of the massive west African outbreak, are likely to be effective – as long as medical teams can reach those who have come into contact with the sick to vaccinate them.

A team of vaccinatio­n experts from Guinea will be deployed to oversee “ring vaccinatio­n”. This method involves offering a shot to everyone who has been exposed to an Ebola case – family, friends and other contacts – setting up a ring of people who are hopefully immune around every case. Vaccinatio­n is expected to start this week. — The Guardian

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