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Health World

World Health Organization Says Ebola in Sierra Leone is Possibly Leveling Off

Ebola, Sierra Leone, World Health Organization
Ebola, Sierra Leone, World Health Organization

The World Health Organization says that Ebola in Sierra Leone may be leveling off, and this is good news because this country has had some of the fastest rising rates of the virus. Sierra Leone has been hardest hit by Ebola, but according to the World Health Organization the viral spread may be slowing. In the past week there have been 250 confirmed cases of the deadly virus but this number is lower than in weeks past and it is promising that the virus may be starting to peter out as medical professionals and individuals gain more knowledge about how to prevent the spread of Ebola. The death toll from Ebole in Sierre Leone has reached 8,235, and to put this number in perspective the global death toll from the latest viral outbreak has affected more than 20,500.

The Ebola weekly report from the World Health Organization looked at 9 countries where the virus has become epidemic. These countries included Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia, the 3 countries which were hit hardest and which had the highest number of cases out of the 9 countries studied. The figures cited in the report were provided by government authorities for each country. According to WHO “There are signs that case incidence may have leveled off in Sierra Leone, although with 248 new confirmed cases reported in the week to 4 January 2015, it remains by far the worst-affected country at present. An increasing emphasis will be put on the rapid deployment of smaller treatment facilities to ensure that capacity is matched with demand in each area.”

 

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Breaking News Canada Health

Canadian Entry Visas for Individuals From Areas With Ebola Have Been Suspended

Canadian entry visas, Ebola
Canadian entry visas, Ebola

Canada is just the latest country to take precautions against Ebola, with Canadian entry visas for individuals from areas with high rates of Ebola have been suspended. Australia has also taken this step as well. This move by Canada is an attempt to keep Ebola out of Canada and to protect Canadians from the deadly virus. There have already been confirmed cases of Ebola in the USA to the south, so it is just a matter of time before the virus hits Canada unless the government takes steps to prevent this. O Friday the government confirmed that visa applications for nationals of countries that have a pattern of “widespread and persistent-intense transmission” when I comes to Ebola have been suspended, and this is also true for residents who are coming from these countries as well.

The suspension of Canadian entry visas for those who come from global regions where Ebola has caused high death tolls and where the virus is still spreading rapidly is viewed as a necessary precaution. The Ebola virus has caused fear and panic in many countries around the world, and medical professionals do not always agree on certain aspects of the virus or the treatment. Canada does have access to an experimental Ebola vaccine but it is better to stop the spread of the virus by containing it, and then treating those in the containment area. The cases in the USA show that people are not always honest, and even medical professionals may be at risk of spreading Ebola if they refuse to self quarantine for the required 21 days.

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Canada Ft Mac Health World

Has Ebola Reached Fort MacMurray? Local Camp Worker Quarantined.

Ebola, camp worker, quarantine
Ebola, camp worker, quarantine

The recent quarantine of a local Fort MacMurray camp worker has raised Ebola fears in this remote community. This all happened at the Hangingstone Project camp operated by Athabasca Oil on Monday, and it created the fear that Ebola could impact the community. The entire camp was put under lock down, and quarantine procedures were initiated, after the camp worker reported to the camp doctor with symptoms similar to the flu. The doctor is the one who initiated the quarantine, not Alberta Health Services, according to the AHS spokesperson Kerry Williamson. The Ebola fears were caused by the fact that several other camp workers stated that the sick individual recently returned from South Africa where he had traveled on a trip. The worker was a contract employee with a local cleaning company, and was not employed by Athabasca Oil.

AHS spokesperson Kerry Williamson explained that the quarantine was not recommended by AHS, and the lock down was eliminated later Monday afternoon after company officials discussed the matter and shared the fear of Ebola in a camp worker who was under quarantine. There was little apparent risk to the local Fort MacMurray community and the general public according to the provincial health officials, so the quarantine was lifted. There have been no suspected Ebola cases in Canada’s North Zone, and the worker did not visit any area of South Africa where the virus has been widespread. According to Williams “We know that the patient who sparked this certainly does not have Ebola. “By the looks of things it looks like the physician went above and beyond by recommending the quarantine, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing.”