Guinea has reached the end of active Ebola virus transmission, the World Health Organisation said on Wednesday, the second such declaration from the country at the epicenter of the world's worst outbreak of the disease.
Guinea
will now enter a 90-day period of heightened surveillance to make sure
of the identification of any new cases before they spread to others.
In
the most recent outbreak, seven confirmed and three possible cases of
the virus surfaced between March 17 and April 6. At least five people
died.
Another three cases were recorded in neighbouring Liberia in a woman who had travelled from Guinea and her two children.
The
flare-up seems to have occurred after a person came into contact with
infected body fluid from an Ebola survivor, WHO said. Since the virus
can remain active in certain body fluids for months, the WHO cautions
the risk of outbreaks remain.
However, WHO spokesman Christian Lindmeier
said on Tuesday that the organisation was confident that affected
countries were prepared and could deal with flare-ups efficiently.
Guinea
is believed to be where the world's worst Ebola outbreak occurred,
spanning three countries primarily and killing 11,310 people. It first
declared itself free of transmission in December.
No comments :
Post a Comment