Arab Times

Congo approves use of experiment­al Ebola vaccine: WHO

Sex bias kills 240,000 infant girls in India yearly: study

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KINSHASA, Congo, May 15, (Agencies): Congo has agreed to allow the World Health Organizati­on to use an experiment­al Ebola vaccine to combat an outbreak announced last week, the WHO director-general said Monday.

The aim is for health officials to start using the vaccine, once it’s shipped, by the end of the week, or next week if there are difficulti­es, said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

“We have agreement, registrati­on, plus import permit — everything formally agreed already. And as you know that vaccine is safe and efficaciou­s and has been already tested. So I think we can all be prepared,” he said. “All is ready now, to use it.”

The outbreak was announced last week in Bikoro, in Congo’s northwest. Health officials traveled there after Congo’s Equateur provincial health ministry on May 3 alerted them to 17 deaths from a hemorrhagi­c fever.

As of May 13, Congo has 39 suspected, probable and confirmed cases of Ebola since April, including 19 deaths, WHO reported. Two cases of Ebola have been confirmed. Congo’s Ministry of Health has requested that WHO send 4,000 doses of the vaccine, said ministry spokeswoma­n Jessyca Ilunga, who said they should arrive by the end of the week.

“The vaccinatio­n campaign starts next week, everything depends on the logistics because the vaccine must be kept at minus 60 degrees Celsius, and we need to assure that the cold chain is assured from Geneva to Bikoro,” she said.

The Ebola vaccinatio­n campaign will first target health workers, Ilunga said. Three nurses are among those with suspected cases, and another is among the dead.

The teams on site have already identified more than 350 contacts, who are people who have had contact with the patients, she said.

Mobile laboratori­es were deployed to Mbandaka and Bikoro on Saturday, she said, adding that results from the first 12 samples tested with that method should be available tomorrow.

This is the ninth Ebola outbreak in Congo since 1976, when the deadly disease was first identified. Congo has a long track record with Ebola, WHO said. The last outbreak that was announced a year ago, was contained and declared over by July 2017.

None of these outbreaks was connected to the massive outbreak in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone that began in 2014 and left more than 11,300 dead.

There is no specific treatment for Ebola, which is spread through the bodily fluids of people exhibiting symptoms.

The new experiment­al vaccine, developed by the Canadian government and now licensed to the U.S.-based Merck and has been shown to be highly effective against the virus. It was tested in Guinea in 2015.

Though the Congo outbreak is of a different strain, the experiment­al vaccine is still thought to be safe and effective.

WHO chief Tedros had led a delegation to the affected region on Sunday.

The Bikoro health zone is about 150 kilometers (93 miles) from Mbandaka, the capital of the Equateur province, and 45 kilometers (28 miles) from Ikoko Impenge,

where there are other suspected cases.

Also: PARIS: Almost a quarter-of-amillion girls younger than five die in India every year due to neglect resulting from society’s preference for sons, a gender discrimina­tion study found on Tuesday.

This was over and above those aborted simply for being female, researcher­s wrote in The Lancet medical journal.

“Gender-based discrimina­tion towards girls doesn’t simply prevent them from being born, it may also precipitat­e the death of those who are born,” said study co-author

Christophe Guilmoto of the Paris Descartes University.

“Gender equity is not only about rights to education, employment or political representa­tion, it is also about care, vaccinatio­n, and nutrition of girls, and ultimately survival.”

Guilmoto and a team used population data from 46 countries to calculate how many infant girls would have died in a society where there was no discrimina­tion impact, and how many died in reality.

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