21/06/21

几内亚宣布埃博拉流行

Ebola workers in Guinaa
Staff wear protective gear at an Ebola treatment centre in Guinea. Copyright:CDC全球健康(CC由2.0)

Speed read

  • Guinea declares end of Ebola outbreak after 42 days without new cases
  • Outbreak resulted in 23 likely cases, 12 deaths since February
  • Success attributed to community buy-in, capacity building and vaccination

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[CONAKRY] Guinean authorities have announced the end of the country’sEbolaepidemic after a 42-day countdown during which no new cases were recorded.

几内亚卫生部长雷米·拉马(Remy Lamah)在6月19日(6月19日)说:“您会记得2月14日,我们第二次在恩Zerekore县的Gouecke农村社区第二次爆发埃博拉病毒疾病爆发。

“After only four months, I am happy today to solemnly declare the end of the resurgence of the Ebola virus disease epidemic in Guinea.”

During the latest wave of Ebola, Guinea recorded 16 confirmed cases and seven probable cases, including 11 patients who survived and 12 who died, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

“只有在我们得到社区的支持的情况下,与流行病的斗争才能有效。没有它,就无法采取有效的公共卫生行动。”

Abdoulaye Toure, CERFIG

In the deadly Ebola epidemic of 2014 to 2016, which also started in Guinea and spread to neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone, there were 3,814 cases and 2,544 deaths.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said: “I commend the affected communities, the government and people of Guinea, health workers, partners and everyone else whose dedicated efforts made it possible to contain this Ebola outbreak.”

Genome sequencing found that the virus behind the latest outbreak was similar to that identified in the 2014 to 2016 epidemic, according to the WHO, which says more studies are needed to better understand how the two outbreaks may be linked.

The 42 days of observation just marked corresponds to twice the incubation period of the disease. That time has passed since the last confirmed Ebola case that escaped follow-up was finally considered to pose no risk of disease transmission in the community.

Alfred Georges Ki-Zerbo, WHO representative in Guinea, explained: “As a precautionary measure, the countdown had to take into account the contacts of this confirmed case not followed up. This is what justified the first 21 days of epidemiological surveillance before the effective start of the countdown which has just ended.

“We can therefore consider that the chain of transmission of the epidemic of the Ebola virus disease has been interrupted,” he added.

Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional director for Africa, says Guinea managed to contain the virus in four months thanks to “innovations and lessons learned from the past”.

CABI & COVID

In addition to community involvement in the epidemic response, WHO deployed more than 100 experts in the field to coordinate prevention, screening and vaccination operations.

The organisation says it also shipped around 24,000 doses of Ebola vaccines to the country, to vaccinate around 11,000 high-risk people, including 2,800 front-linehealth工人。

Drawing lessons from this epidemic, Abdoulaye Toure, director of the Guinea Centre for Research and Training in Infectious Diseases (CERFIG), said: “We were once again convinced that the fight against epidemics can only be effective if we have the community buy-in. Without it there can be no effective public health actions.”

Toure says the second epidemic has also shown the importance of strengthening localcapacityfor surveillance and diagnosis.

“The support of the regional hospital laboratory by the National Institute of Public Health has greatly reduced the waiting time for laboratory results and facilitated the follow-up of contacts,” he added.

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Despite declaring Guinea’s second Ebola outbreak over, the health ministry sounded a note of caution. “We must be extra vigilant in order to detect in time any form of outbreak of this epidemic in the future, while preventing its spread both in the N’Zerekore region and in the rest of the country,” warned Lamah.

To this end, Guinean health authorities have reactivated a surveillance programme for survivors to provide long-term post-care monitoring and support.

This article was produced by SciDev.Net’s Sub-Saharan Africa French edition and edited for clarity and brevity.

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