Sun.Star Cebu

UN update: Ebola in Congo now infecting newborn babies

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The World Health Organizati­on says a worrying number of the newest Ebola cases amid Congo’s ongoing outbreak are in patients not usually known to catch the disease: babies.

In an update published this week, the U.N. health agency reported 36 new confirmed cases of Ebola, including seven in newborn babies and infants younger than two years old. Six cases were reported in children aged between two and 17 and one case was in a pregnant woman.

While Ebola typically infects adults, as they are most likely to be exposed to the lethal virus, children have been known in some instances to catch the disease when they act as caregivers.

Few cases of Ebola in babies have been reported, but experts suspect transmissi­on might happen via breast milk or close contact with infected parents. Ebola is typically spread by infected bodily fluids. WHO noted that health centers have been identified as a source of Ebola transmissi­on, with injections of medication­s “a notable cause.”

WHO called Congo’s current epidemic “complex and challengin­g.” Congo’s health ministry says there are 346 confirmed cases, including 175 deaths, in what has become the worst Ebola outbreak in the country’s recorded history.

The increasing number of cases in children and health workers—39 health workers have been infected to date— suggests outbreak responders are having major problems stopping the virus in health clinics and convincing people to seek help when they develop symptoms. This is the first time this part of Congo has faced an Ebola outbreak.

WHO said the risk of the outbreak spreading to neighborin­g countries remains “very high” but it does not recommend travel restrictio­ns. Uganda this month started vaccinatin­g health workers against Ebola in a heavily traveled border district near the outbreak. /

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