Arab Times

Mission unaccompli­shed: Containing Ebola in Africa

World faces herculean task to end an epidemic

- By Marilynn Marchione

back, the mistakes are easy to see: Waiting too long, spending too little, relying on the wrong people, thinking small when they needed to think big. Many people, government­s and agencies share the blame for failing to contain Ebola when it emerged in West Africa.

Now they share the herculean task of trying to end an epidemic that has sickened more than 9,000, killed more than 4,500, seeded cases in Europe and the United States, and is not even close to being controlled.

Many of the missteps are detailed in a draft of an internal World Health Organizati­on report obtained by The Associated Press. It shows there was not one pivotal blunder that gave Ebola the upper hand, but a series of them that mounted.

Nearly every agency and government stumbled. Heavy criticism falls on WHO, where there was “a failure to see that conditions for explosive spread were present right at the start.”

WHO — the United Nations’ health agency — had some incompeten­t staff, let bureaucrat­ic bungles delay people and money to fight the virus, and was hampered by budget cuts and the need to battle other diseases flaring around the world, the report says.

In a statement, WHO said the draft document has not been checked for accuracy and that the agency would not comment until it was finished. WHO’s chief, Dr Margaret Chan, did not respond to AP requests for comment, but told Bloomberg news service that she “was not fully informed” as the disaster evolved. “We responded, but our response may not have matched the scale of the outbreak and the complexity of the outbreak,” she said.

Outside experts say the point now is not to grab necks or find fault, but to learn from mistakes.

“By the time we recognized this was serious, the genie was already out of the bottle,” said Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota public health expert. “Nobody is to blame because everybody is to blame.”

Ebola had caused two dozen smaller outbreaks elsewhere in Africa before it appeared in the western part of the continent earlier this year, “so people were caught off guard” by its rapid spread, said Dr Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University. “We thought we would do what we usually do and that this would come under control, but that didn’t turn out to be the case.”

The first mistake came Jan 11 at a hospital in Gueckedou, Guinea, where the grandmothe­r of the first two children known to have died in this outbreak sought care. It was a rare opportunit­y — most people just seek help from traditiona­l healers. But instead of detecting and stopping the disease, the hospital compounded the problem: Two new chains of transmissi­on began, among patients and health workers, and in another village.

On Jan 27, local health officials and Doctors Without Borders missed a chance to diagnose Ebola after seeing bacteria in blood samples — they concluded cholera might be the culprit. Ebola wasn’t confirmed until March 21. By the end of the month, it had spread to Liberia.

In April, Doctors Without Border warned that the outbreak was out of control, but a WHO spokesman insisted it wasn’t. In May, the funeral of a traditiona­l healer in Sierra Leone spread the virus to hundreds of people.

“It was a turning point. It refueled the epidemic in Guinea and it was the start of major epidemics in Liberia and Sierra Leone,” said Dr Peter Piot, co-discoverer of the Ebola virus and director of London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Little went smoothly. WHO’s Guinea office was accused of not helping a team of experts get visas to that country. Some $500,000 in aid was held up by red tape.

In early July, Piot “called for a state of emergency to be declared and for military operations to be deployed,” he said.

It didn’t happen.

Informatio­n

In Guinea, the ministry of health at first would give WHO informatio­n only on lab-confirmed Ebola cases, hampering the investigat­ion. Messages to the public about the lethal nature of the disease discourage­d people from seeking treatment. When masked teams arrived to disinfect hot zones, people thought they were spraying toxic chemicals and attacked them.

Early internatio­nal aid was mishandled. Guinean President Alpha Conde set up a panel with the ministers of health, communicat­ions and social affairs to fight the disease, but the minister of health couldn’t formulate an effective strategy and little money was dispersed. Finally, a new committee of independen­t experts was appointed and funds began to flow.

In Liberia, early government messages stressed that Ebola had no cure, so sick people saw little reason to go to a hospital, and the disease spread even more. In August, the government quarantine­d a Monrovia slum, sparking clashes with security forces that killed a teen. Ultimately, health officials realized they couldn’t track or limit Ebola spreading in the slum. Many bodies were dumped into nearby rivers.

In Sierra Leone, the government sent politician­s to warn people about Ebola rather than relying more on charitable groups and medical profession­als, said Joseph Smith, a community activist in the capital city of Freetown. Some feared it was a government conspiracy to use Ebola to wipe out opposition supporters ahead of a national census planned for December.

“They believed that the whole situation was a kind of lie,” Smith said.

In Spain, where a nurse got Ebola after taking care of a patient who died of it, debate raged over whether protective gear protocols were being followed. Health workers protested about a lack of training; the government overhauled it and adopted new equipment standards.

Criticized

On Sept 20, Ebola made a 5,700-mile trip to the United States, when a Liberian man, Thomas Eric Duncan, flew to Dallas. His infection was confirmed on Sept 30. Two nurses who cared for him before he died now have the disease.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been harshly criticized by many who say it offered shifting advice on protective gear to hospitals and failed to assess correctly what risk Duncan’s infection posed and to whom.

In fact, the CDC had been among the earliest responders when Ebola surfaced in Africa, sending five people to Guinea in late March and two more to Liberia in April. In late May, the situation seemed in hand and CDC called back its staff. (AP)

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 ??  ?? Burial team in protective gear carry a body of woman suspected to have died from Ebola virus in Monrovia, Liberia, Oct
18. (AP) MADRID, Oct 19, (AFP): Doctor Lago was with her kids, Doctor Fernandez was at Pilates class and Doctors Arsuaga and De la...
Burial team in protective gear carry a body of woman suspected to have died from Ebola virus in Monrovia, Liberia, Oct 18. (AP) MADRID, Oct 19, (AFP): Doctor Lago was with her kids, Doctor Fernandez was at Pilates class and Doctors Arsuaga and De la...

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