Tag: Ebola

  • Ebola: Ensuring safety of doctors, others

    Ebola: Ensuring safety of doctors, others

    Some doctors and healthworkers have contracted the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) while treating patients. OYEYEMI GBENGA-MUSTAPHA and WALE ADEPOJU write on the World Health Organisation (WHO) requirements for them to stay EVD-free. 

    The risk of Ebola transmission is low. One can only be infected through direct physical contact with the body fluids – vomit, faeces, urine, blood, semen, etc – of patients and those who died of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). Avoiding contact is a guaranteed way of staying EVD-free.

    Those at higher risk of infection are health workers, their family members and others in close contact with anyone infected with EVD or who has died of it. Those who have Ebola require expert care at designated facilities. Ebola can destroy families and communities, but the infection can be controlled through the use of recommended protective measures.

    For health personnel, the World Health Organisation (WHO) requires that they put on a Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). PPE consists of double gloves; fluid-resistant, impermeable laboratory gown, over the lab coat; either a combination of approved particulate respirators (e.g., N95, or higher filtering face piece respirator, e.g, N100) and eye protection (e.g. goggles/face shields/shroud), or powered air purifying respirators (PAPRs).

    Sources said infection control staff, healthcare epidemiologists, administrators, nurses and persons responsible for developing, implementing, and evaluating infection control programmes for healthcare settings across the continuum of care should be kitted from contracting any infection, “because the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) defined PPE as specialised clothing or equipment worn by an employee for protection against infectious materials.”

    In Nigeria, health workers may not have the ability to prepare for potential exposures. For example, in some places, care may be provided in clinics with limited resources (e.g. no running water, no climate control, no floors, inadequate medical supplies), and workers could be in those areas for several hours with a number of  (suspected, unconfirmed) Ebola infected patients. In addition, certain job responsibilities and tasks, such as attending to dead bodies, may also require a different PPE than what is used when providing care for infected patients in a hospital. But, many private hospitals, clinics and funeral homes have been carrying on their business as usual.

    The late Dr. Iyke Enemuo, who died of EVD in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, contracted the disease when he treated an Ebola patient secretly. Enemuo died of Ebola at the Good Heart Hospital in Port Harcourt on Friday, August 22. Before his death, he practised at the Sam Steel Clinic on the East West Road in Rumuokoro. He was infected with the disease by an ECOWAS diplomat whom he treated in a hotel. The ECOWAS diplomat was infected after he came in contact with the Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer, the index case. The unidentified diplomat escaped quarantine in Lagos and travelled to Port Harcourt. The diplomat recovered from the disease and returned to Lagos but the doctor died. Enemuo’s wife, also a doctor, had shown symptoms of the disease and has been quarantined. The couple’s three month old baby has also been quarantined.

    The late Dr Stella Adadevoh was said to have contracted the EVD from the index case, the late Sawyer, when he went wild and splashed his bodily fluids, including his blood on her and other nurses on duty. These health workers were not adequately protected, with the right apparatus despite that the hospital had a high suspicion of EVD in the Liberian-American; and had sent his specimen for laboratory investigation.

    With the deaths, and more EVD suspected cases, the Lagos State and the Federal Governments set up the Case Management Centre at the Infectious Disease Control Hospital (IDH), Yaba.

    According to the WHO, there are basically two categories of people involved in the treatment of any infectious disease: front-line health workers and secondary-line health workers. Both must, however, observe the protocol for handling suspected cases.

    The WHO is explicit on steps to putting on PPE and removing them; safely collect blood samples from persons suspected to be infected with highly infectious blood-borne pathogens and safely ship human blood samples from suspected Ebola cases.

    For clinical management of patients with viral haemorrhagic fever (VHF), a pocket guide for frontline health workers is available. But how many of such personnel have availed themselves of the information?

    Laboratory workers involved in EVD screening are yet to record any casualty, perhaps they have observed to the letter WHO recommendations that: personnel entering the laboratory must remove street clothings, including undergarments, and jewelery, and change into dedicated laboratory clothing and shoes, or don full coverage protective clothing (i.e., completely covering all street clothing). Additional protection may be worn over laboratory clothing when infectious materials are directly handled, such as solid-front gowns with tight fitting wrists, gloves, and respiratory protection. Eye protective covering must be used where there is a known or potential risk of exposure to splashes.

    Ebola outbreaks can be contained using available interventions like early detection and isolation, contact tracing and monitoring, and adherence to rigorous procedures of infection control. While some individuals, organisations and governments at different levels are getting the prevention of EVD in Nigeria, right, some are yet to.

    Some state governments have gone ahead to screen citizens’ temperatures on the roads; banks are also screening for exceptionally high temperature in customers, before they can come in for business; citizens have gone from eating garcinia kola; drinking salt water to using sanitiser, where water and soap are not easily accessible. The government is paying attention to airports, but land and sea borders are yet to be properly monitored.

    A fever of greater than 38.6 degrees Celsius or 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, and additional symptoms such as severe headache, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, or unexplained hemorrhage are basic signs and symptoms of EVD.

    Given that ignorance is rife in the country’s health sector on EVD, health personnel that have no need for PPE, where they are available, are donning same.

    For instance, at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba, the fear of contracting Ebola has made most personnel, including security officers, to turn the hospital into a ‘masquerade-like’ premises, by putting on PPEs, full body suits, face masks and elbow size gloves, among others.

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof Akin Osibogun, said: “It is not every case of fever or vomiting that is Ebola. People should not panic anytime they see such cases. Though we have a high index for suspicions. We had a patient brought in from the International Airport. Every confirmed case will be managed only at the State-designated Case Management Centre in Yaba. We still exercise precautions on all cases, so nobody should panic. The two patients are being investigated and until we have our results we cannot say they are positive.

    “Our challenge is that we have PPE and other requirements but they are being used by the wrong personnel. It is only doctors and other healthcare givers who are attending and may have close contact with a patient that should ordinarily use those. We are trying to now carry out enlightenment programme for our workforce. Simple hand washing with soap and water, maintaining a reasonable distance of few metres away from people or patients, as the case maybe is all that are basically needed not to contract the Ebola. We have taken specimen of the patients and we are awaiting the results.

    “There is a protocol for handling suspected cases. LUTH staff has over used the PPE. What are required at the A and E are gloves; aprons that are water resistant. It is limiting physical contact where those cases are isolated that must be emphasised. Why would the hospital expose its workforce, like 20 people, to isolated suspected patients?

    “In a bid to prevent the disease, even security personnel are putting on PPE. This is gross misuse of those materials. Such create more panic. The hospital has strategic stock of PPE for doctors, nurses and others. But if everybody in the hospital is using it, won’t we run out of stock? I repeat it is only those in close contact with suspected cases that can use those materials. Anyone that has been putting on the PPE in the hospital is creating fear, they are looking like masquerades. What is happening with these two cases is just ultra high suspicion.”

    The Nation gathered that the two patients were brought in and quarantined, at the Hold bay, for further observations because they presented with high fever, vomiting and diarrhoea. The patients’ specimens were being taken for screening but they were negative.

    Pandemonium broke when one of the patients died, “and blood was coming out from the orifices. And because the personnel at the Accident and Emergency (A and E) unit did not have basic precautionary universal tools to protect themselves, they left the patient unattended to. And there the news spread like wildfire that the patient died of Ebola,” stated a source who claimed to be at the scene of the incident.

    To ensure their members are protected against all forms of hazard, especially EVD, the executives of the hospital’s Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) took up the matter.

    According to the Vice Chairman, National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), LUTH branch, Comrade (Mrs) Oluyemisi Adelaja, ‘when doctors called off their strike, work peaked yesterday at the hospital and patients were being admitted and taken care of by the health workers. Some of the staff came up complaining that most of the things, such as protective gadgets they should work with were not available, especially the universal basic precautions kits.  We then as responsible representatives went to the concerned departments (Store) that should supply those things. The routine is that each unit makes a request for what are needed. Some units have and some don’t. This is because of the doctors’ strike; we have not been having many patients.

    “Then two patients came overnight with suspicious signs of Ebola. They both had history of vomiting, high fever and diarrhoea of over three weeks. One was said to be bleeding from the orifices. They were admitted in the Spill over. Then one of them died. Because of the apprehension in the country over Ebola, nobody thought it safe to move near the corpse. But the hospital has not established it as Ebola case. Investigation results are yet to be out. Workers are only agitated because, due to the doctors’ strike we have not been coming in contact with many patients. Now in the face of Ebola, nobody  thinks it safe to get that close, majority think it safe to put on personnel protective equipment (PPE). But that is not possible. It is only personnel that will have close contact with many patients that can put on PPE. There is provision for A and E.

    “We then moved to the Store to verify what the Management told us on Friday, which was to collect certain items, and our members’ allegation that they don’t have those items. The Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) discovered that out of 11 items, that are supposed only three were available at the Store. The personnel at the Procurement Department told us that some companies are expected to make some supplies, and they are expecting those deliveries. That approval had been given before now, but that it was done late yesterday.”

    The Secretary of the LUTH branch of the Senior Staff Association of Universities, Teaching Hospitals, Research Institutes and Associated Institutions (SSAUTHRIAI) of Nigeria, Comrade Johnson Shaba said: “While doctors were on strike, we as health sector stakeholders were monitoring the news on Ebola as it is ravaging neighbouring countries. So we as partners in progress were consulting with the management on how lives, be it those of patients or the hospital’s staff, won’t be lost to EVD.

    “We mapped out how to manage it should there be cases here in LUTH. Not that we will become panicky and be running helter skelter. The management appreciated our being proactive and promised, along with the Ministry of Health, to get those things ready; that before doctors called off the strike they would have made available those things. The hospital equally created a place called, the Observatory section, where suspected cases of Ebola would be monitored and screened, and if positive would be transferred to the Mainland Hospital, set up by the Lagos State Government.”

    Comrade Shaba gave further insight on the Ebola scare in the hospital: “Then, this morning, our members said Ebola has entered LUTH and that they were no longer safe because there is nothing to protect them. We told them that the patient had not been confirmed as Ebola case. And that we should not heat up the hospital unnecessarily. Based on our members concern, we moved into action. It was found out that some units, such as the Staff Clinic; Medicine had been equipped. Only few units are remaining.

    “Based on circular, we moved to find out why and the Procurement Personnel explained the delay in logistics. And that once deliveries are made, such will be distributed according to the requests. We are happy to discover that reputable pharmaceutical companies would supply those things and not that contract was awarded to some people, who may end up bringing in inferior things, which will jeopardise our health.”

    Comrade Shaba appealed to the Management that: “Water is important and highly crucial now and everything must be done to ensure its constant flow as against what is happening now. Likewise, constant supply of soap, sanitisers and PPE, at no time should there be break in supply as that could lead to loss of life. The agitation of members that had contact with those two spills over patients is understandable. We have enlightened them and should they be negative or positive, the results would not be hidden from them. Should they (the patients) be positive, they will be handled by the procedure as laid down by the Federal Government and being implemented but the Lagos State Government. What normally kills is not the disease or the causative agent but the fear. We appeal to all stakeholders not to panic.”

    According to a Pharmacist, Remi Adeseun, there are standard requirements for containing or managing EVD cases. Such include: “Elbow length gloves; Level four overalls with hood, knee booths, goggles, medical masks, anti-viral sanitisers, rubber aprons, respirators and bags of hair-nets for female health workers. For the frontline health workers, the items include elbow length gloves, medical masks, and anti-viral sanitisers, level three overalls with hood; rubber aprons and thermal scanners.”

    According to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in hospital settings, Ebola virus can be killed by any brand of bleach or disinfectants.

    It stated: “Ebola virus is susceptible to three per cent acetic acid, one percent glutaraldehyde, alcohol-based products, and dilutions (1:10-1:100 for 10 minutes) of 5.25 per cent household bleach (sodium hypochlorite), and calcium hypochlorite (bleach powder). The WHO recommendations for cleaning up spills of blood or body fluids suggest flooding the area with 1:10 dilutions of 5.25 per cent household bleach for 10 minutes for surfaces that can tolerate stronger bleach solutions (e.g., cement, metal). For surfaces that may corrode or discolour, they recommend careful cleaning to remove visible stains followed by contact with a 1:100 dilution of 5.25 percent household bleach for more than 10 minutes.”

    According to Infection Control Officer, LUTH, Dr (Mrs) Oyin Oduyebo: “To get this WHO recommendation right at the household level, get a bottle of household bleach (sodium hypochlorite) (any brand is ok). The starting concentration is 3.5 per cent of hypochlorite or sodium hypochlorite (i.e one bottle of the product). Pour the whole content into a cup. One cup of bleach to six cups of water will give 0.5 per cent. From this take another one cup and add to nine cups of water, so you end up with 0.05 per cent for hand washing. If it is two per cent concentrated it will burn the hands.”

    Prof Osibogun said Nigerians should be wary of the kind of sanitisers they buy: “Any good one should contain 70 per cent of alcohol. Use 70 per cent alcohol-based sanitiser where there is no water and soap and keep a safe distance of one metre from when interacting with people. The screenings being done by banks and others is a phase, borne out of panic. It will pass. One must do constant hand washing with soap and water.”

  • Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Last week, there was a major scare over the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in Abuja when a woman was alleged to have died of the virus at the Asokoro General Hospital. GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports.

    There have been speculations about the possibility of a case of Ebola virus disease in Abuja. Sources say the suspected carrier attended a conference at the NICON Luxury Hotel and must have had contacts with other people. Residents of Abuja experienced another Ebola scare, aside the earlier one which featured the unfortunate viral messages that prescribed bathing with and drinking of salt water as preventive measures.

    Health authorities had also educated people on the Ebola virus; informing them about the possibility of surviving the disease. People have  also  been encouraged to improve the level of personal hygiene and avoid unnecessary body contacts with people.

    The current wave of scare started when activities in the Utako District of Abuja were paralysed over an alleged Ebola victim. The incident took place at a junction along Ekukinam Street beside Alibro Atrium, close to ABC Transport Park, where a middle-aged man suddenly slumped while walking along the road.

    The man was reportedly vomiting and sweating profusely. The incident scared people who immediately speculated that he was probably an Ebola victim. Nobody went to his aid for the fear of Ebola.

    But less than three weeks after a suspected Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) patient died in a private hospital in Abuja, the scare about the virus in an Asokoro General Hospital began.

    The incident which caused grave panic in the territory is yet to abate as officials of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Health Secretariat are still making efforts to enlighten the public properly.

    When contacted for comment on the issue, the spokesperson of the FCT Health Secretariat, Badaru Salisu Yakasai, in a statement said the results of the test are yet to either confirm or refute claims that the patient died of the Ebola Virus Disease.

    He said: “The Family Medicine Unit of Asokoro District Hospital suspected Ebola disease in a patient on admission at the Accident and Emergency Unit on August 28 and immediately isolated the patient. Strict infection control measures were immediately taken.

    “Blood sample was then taken to the designated FCT Ebola testing laboratory which is within the hospital premises. The Epidemiology Unit of Public Health Department of the Health and Human Services Secretariat was notified and their response was immediate.

    “The results of the Ebola testing were being expected from the laboratory. Members of staff of the hospital who came in contact with the deceased were then placed under strict surveillance, pending when the test results will be out.

    “The case also served as a drill to test the preparedness of the hospital to manage and contain Ebola disease. Clinical assessment, however, did not reveal any history of contact or travel.

    “However, in view of the high index of suspicion, isolation and strict infection control measures were continued and the unit was condoned off. Unfortunately, the patient died the next day, Friday, August 29.

    ”The Accident and Emergency Unit was temporarily relocated to the General Outpatient Unit (GOPD). A list of all medical staff that had contact with the patient has been compiled and they are all under surveillance.

    “The general public is advised not to panic as a case of Ebola has not been confirmed at the hospital and the measures that have been put in place are only precautionary in the interest of public safety.”

    Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu immediately refuted the claim after tests had been carried out on the dead person. He confirmed that she did not die as a result of the Ebola virus, adding that there was no Ebola outbreak in Abuja.

    Despite this clarification, some are still convinced that the patient died as a result of the Ebola virus while others are living in fear.

    Many residents spoke to our correspondent about their reactions on the speculation.

    A businessman, Mr. Shola Odumosun said: “When I had about it, I had to disregard it. Being an enlightened person, one of the things I have discovered since the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Nigeria is that apprehension and unnecessary fear kills faster than the virus itself. There is the need for people to be properly enlightened about the sad development.

    “As far as the Ministry of Health is concerned, I am quite convinced that for now there is no Ebola outbreak in Abuja. But you know people around me started being panicky and were even calling their loved ones to stay away from the Asokoro General Hospital.

    “I watched a video about a man running from Ebola and a lady around there had to jump into a well. This means that she had even sentenced herself to death before death itself would come. People should take their time to ascertain the truth or otherwise of every rumour they heard. If care is not taken, it may affect both our private and public health sectors so much so that those who are supposed to receive emergency attention for a particular sickness far from Ebola will end up being quarantined unnecessarily.

    “These days, many are dying due to the fear that they are carriers of EVD. That you have Ebola is even not an automatic death sentence. There are measures to be taken in Lagos and other places where some people that were quarantined initially were freed.

    “I haven’t called any member of my family in Abuja because I know it was a rumour.”

    Another resident, Adelani Adepegba said: “The news which turned out to be a rumour really scared me. I immediately concluded that it meant that the EVD is already in Abuja. I asked members of my family and friends to take note and avoid the hospital.

    “The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and the chairmen of the area councils need to do more as regards enlightenment campaigns. We cannot afford to experience EVD in Abuja; it will be more disastrous being the seat of power. I was worried but thank God it was a rumour. People should be more particular about personal hygiene.”

    A civil servant, Mr. Paul Oba said he had vowed not to visit the hospital for now. “I was sad when I heard of the EVD case in the hospital. I quickly alerted members of my church who use it . I then vowed not to visit the hospital. But we thank God that it was a rumour.”

    On her part, Mary Obioma said: “I use the hospital frequently before the rumour, but now I am  afraid of visiting that hospital. Prevention, they say, is better than cure. When I heard the news, I was shocked because I was at the Asokoro Hospital on that day.

    “Government should make public happenings in our hospitals to avoid the spread of the EVD. Who knows if some people have been affected and are afraid of coming out in public to be cured or quarantined? They may be afraid of stigmatisation.

    “They should also know that they are doing more harm to members of their family, their neighbourhood and the entire country. My prayer is that the EVD should not go beyond the present stage in Nigeria.”

  • Ebola: Bayelsa screens dignitaries at transparency briefing

    Ebola: Bayelsa screens dignitaries at transparency briefing

    Dignitaries invited for the 16th edition of the Bayelsa State Transparency Briefing were screened for the Ebola Virus Disease on Monday.

    Political appointees, traditional rulers, captains of industries and journalists were subjected to thorough scrutiny before they were allowed to the Banquet Hall in Yenagoa, the venue of the programme.

    Health workers were mobilised to the entrance of the venue with some electronic devices and hand sanitisers for the screening.

    There have been Ebola scare in the state since victims of the virus were identified in Lagos and Port-Harcourt, Rivers State.

    But the Governor of the state, Mr. Seriake Dickson, after his resumption from his two-week leave declared that the state was free of the virus.

    “The public should not panic. There is no known case of Ebola up till now in Bayelsa,” he said.

    He said the committee on Ebola chaired by his Commissioner for Health, Dr. Ayibatonye Owei, has been making required efforts to protect the state from Ebola.

    He, however, said the Ebola problem was not yet over following its discovery in the neighbouring Rivers State.

    Dickson in his first public outing after his holiday advised the people of the state to remain vigilant and ensure high level of hygiene in their daily activities.

    He further appealed to them to report cases of Ebola symptoms to the government and to desist from seeking cure from religious and spiritual homes.

    Addressing people in the state, he said: “l call on all Bayelsa to continue being vigilant. When you notice somebody with such symptoms, it is not the time to run to herbalists or prayer warriors.

    “It is not the time for you to start hiding. Come out for the treatment when you have such symptoms.”

     

  • No new cases of Ebola in Nigeria – Minister

    No new cases of Ebola in Nigeria – Minister

    Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, on Monday debunked the news making the rounds on fresh outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease in the country.

    The minister at a press conference on the update of the virus in Nigeria said there was no any iota of truth in the latest rumor of fresh cases in some parts of the country.

    He noted that outside the cases in Lagos and Rivers States, no other fresh incidence of Ebola had been reported.

    At the moment only one person, the wife of the Port Harcourt doctor is on treatment in the isolation ward in Lagos, though she is no longer showing symptoms and is undergoing tests preparatory to her discharge this week.

    So far seven people have died from the Ebola, including Mr. Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American who imported the virus into the country.

    The minister said another patient was discharged on Sunday. The patient, according to him is the sister of the Port Harcourt doctor, Iyke Enemuo.

    He said, “It has been 50 days since Ebola Virus Disease was imported into Nigeria through Lagos and 38 days since it was introduced into Port Harcourt.

    “So far, all the cases that have been confirmed in Nigeria are traceable to the index case, the Liberian-American, Mr. Patrick Sawyer.

    “As of this morning the total number of confirmed cases of EVD in Nigeria is 19. That is 15 in Lagos and four in Port Harcourt.

    “The 19th case is the fiancé of one of the primary contacts of Mr. Sawyer’s who died of the disease. The test results were equivocal but further tests established the disease. He had only mild symptoms and he has since recovered from the illness. He was quarantined, but because of the equivocal test result, he was not placed on active treatment.

    “The total number of deaths from EVD in Nigeria stands at seven.  Five of this died in Lagos, one in a private hospital, the index case, Mr. Sawyer, and the other four in the isolation ward in Lagos State.

    Two died in Port Harcourt, the medical doctor who died in a private hospital and the contact, a patient in the hospital, who died in the isolation ward in Rivers State.

    The total number of patients who have been successfully managed and discharged stands at nine.

    “The latest is the sister of the Port Harcourt doctor who was discharged from the isolation ward in Rivers State on Sunday. It should be noted that the nine patients successfully managed and discharged are among the 11 survivors of EVD in Nigeria.

    “At the moment only one person, the wife of the Port Harcourt doctor is on treatment in the isolation ward in Lagos. She is no longer showing symptoms and is undergoing tests preparatory to her discharge from the isolation ward this week.”

     

  • Hope rises for Ebola vaccine

    Hope rises for Ebola vaccine

    Vaccinated monkeys have developed “long-term” immunity to the Ebola virus, raising a prospect of successful human trials, say scientists.

    The experiments by the United States (U.S.) National Institutes of Health showed immunity could last at least 10 months, according to a report by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

    Human trials of the vaccine started last week in the U.S. and will extend to the United Kingdom and Africa.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) said more than 2,000 people have died in the outbreak in West Africa.

    Several experimental treatments are being considered to help contain the spread of Ebola.

    This includes a vaccine being developed by the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline.

    It uses a genetically modified chimp virus containing components of two species of Ebola – Zaire, which is currently circulating in West Africa, and the common Sudan species.

    The viral vaccine does not replicate inside the body, but it is hoped the immune system will react to the Ebola component of the vaccine and develop immunity.

    Animal research, on which the decision to begin human trials was based, has now been published in the journal Nature Medicine.

    It shows four crab-eating macaques all survived what would have been a fatal dose of Ebola virus five weeks later.

    However, only half survived an infection 10 months after immunisation.

    Dr Anthony Fauci, the director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told the BBC: “The good part of this vaccine is that at five weeks or earlier you get full protection.

    “The sobering news is the durability isn’t great, but if you give a boost, a second shot, you make it really durable.”

    “We knew this worked in the monkey months ago and based on this paper we started human trials.”

    For now this is the best evidence available on how successful such a vaccine would be in people.

    The first patient, a 39-year-old woman, was given the vaccine last week as human trials got under way.

    There will also be separate trials of the vaccine against just the Zaire Ebola species.

    These will take place in the US, the University of Oxford in the UK as well as in Mali and Gambia.

    The WHO said safety data would be ready by November 2014 and, if the vaccine proved safe, it would be used in West Africa immediately.

    Healthcare workers and other frontline staff would be prioritised for vaccination.

    The number of doses currently available is between 400 – if a lot of vaccine is needed for immunity – and 4,000 if smaller amounts are sufficient.

    As with all experimental therapies, the WHO has warned hopes of a vaccine must not detract from the proven methods of infection control which have defeated all previous outbreaks.

    Prof Jonathan Ball, a virologist at the University of Nottingham, said: “This is really encouraging data.

    “The degree of protection seen with the chimpanzee adenovirus alone – which will be used in one of the human clinical trials planned for the UK, Mali and the Gambia – was still pretty impressive, especially when the animals received Ebola virus within a few weeks of vaccination.

    “This is important as it would keep the dosing regimen simple and could still provide good protection in the sort of outbreak that we are seeing in Western Africa at the moment.”

  • Academy of Science partners  Fed Govt in tackling Ebola

    Academy of Science partners Fed Govt in tackling Ebola

    The Nigerian Academy of Science says that it is collaborating with the Federal Government in the fight against Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in the country.

    The President of the academy, Prof. Oyewale Tomori, made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja  yesterday.

    He said  members of the academy had been involved in the management of Ebola for a long time in providing guidance in the area of laboratory.

    “Our members are involved in organising and coordinating the activities of laboratories, if they do not diagnose properly, we cannot know what we have and how to go about looking for a solution.

    “Even before the virus came into Nigeria, scientists had provided support to the Federal Ministry of Health.

    “We advised on the need to strengthen port health measures as a means of checking the entry of some of the very deadly diseases, including Ebola into the country,” he said.

    According to him, the search for Ebola cure is a worldwide challenge, not that of Nigeria alone.

    The president, however, said the academy had nonetheless been involved in the search for a solution.

    “Since the first Ebola virus broke out in 1976, this is the first time we are having it in Nigeria, so it could not be regarded as our sole problem.

    “Finding a cure for Ebola, therefore, is getting international response since it is a cross-border menace,’’ he said.

    Tomori, a professor of virology, cautioned on the handling of Ebola issues because of the sensitive nature of the virus.

    “It is so dangerous that you need the right equipment because it will be suicidal to work with Ebola cases without the right kind of equipment.

    “To work with Ebola cases we need to improve on certain things, some basic infrastructures like constant electricity supply and bio-security,” he said.

    He advised the Federal Government to look beyond the immediate Ebola crisis by funding the health sector and the development of science in general in the interest of the country.

  • WAEC screens GCE candidates for Ebola

    WAEC screens GCE candidates for Ebola

    The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) at the weekend screened candidates taking the General Certificate of Education (GCE) examination at some Lagos centres.

    WAEC’s Head of Nigeria Office (HNO) Charles Eguridu led the screening team.

    Eguridu said the screening, among others, would ensure that candidates who took the Economics paper on Saturday were not only Ebola-free but also medically fit.

    He said the exercise was part of WAEC’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) to its candidates.

    Eguridu, who held an infrared thermometer to screen the candidates in some of the schools, explained that the screening did not distract them.

    According to him, it takes less than a minute to attend a candidate.

    Eguridu said: “There is nothing to worry about. It would not affect their performance. It took about 30 seconds to screen each of them.”

    The WAEC chief said besides the screening, the council arranged for an ambulance and a medic to handle emergencies.

    He said many centres would be covered.

  • Local govt chief preaches cleanliness to curb Ebola

    Local govt chief preaches cleanliness to curb Ebola

    Residents of Ojodu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in Lagos State have been advised to imbibe cleanliness to prevent the spread of Ebola.

    The Council Chairman, Olumuyiwa Oloro, said at a parley with stakeholders warned that Ebola thrivers in an unclean environment.

    He distributed fliers to the stakeholders, urging them to take the campaign to the grassroots.

    Oloro said the council’s environmental health officials would ensure that residents abide by rules for healthy living.

    “I make bold to say that our council was the first to flag off the campaign against Ebola disease. However, before it became an issue, we had never shirked our bounden duty to keep our people alive to the fact that they must live clean and maintain a filth-free environment. This we shall continue to do,” Oloro said.

    The council chief urged residents to desist from indiscriminate dumping of refuse and defaecation in public places.

    He said every member of the council would monitor residents’ to ensure their compliance with sanitation rules, especially during the state’s monthly exercise.

  • Our churches, schools and Ebola

    The Ebola pandemic has inevitably come with serious challenges. Given what has been said of its mode of transmission and fatality, many people, institutions and governments have reacted to it in different ways all in a bid to halt the spread.

    Though efforts of governments especially in states where there have been an outbreak have been commended, signals emanating from the larger society do not give sufficient cause for comfort. Not unexpectedly, the rumour mill has been agog with all manner of stories some of them leading to false alarm and panic.

    Matters have been such that a sick person now stands the chance of abandonment for fear that he or she may have been infected by the deadly virus. In some pubic institutions and hospitals, people including medical doctors were reported to have scampered for safety as rumours went round that an infected patient had been brought there.

    But in most of these cases, tests conducted on the suspects proved to the contrary. The confusion has been so much so that even the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) had to come out clearly to state that it will still cater for accident victims irrespective of the Ebola virus outbreak.

    This statement highlights the problems which sick persons and their relatives are bound to face if a quick handle is not found to the deadly virus which spreads like wild fire. Stories emanating from other West African countries where the outbreak has been most rampant speak of confusion and helplessness on the part of their people. There were even reports of food shortages and all that.

    That is why all the precautionary measures taken by the government, churches and other private establishments to stem the spread must be supported by all. Regrettably, signals from the larger society seem to convey the impression that all are not on the same page on the imperative of these safety measures.

    The federal government’s directive for all private and public primary and secondary schools to remain closed till October 13, to enable them control the virus has been challenged by private school proprietors in Lagos. They drew parallels with churches and markets and contended that if these public places have remained open, it was needless closing the schools. What needed to done in their view was for the government to provide safety measures for the schools to adhere.

    Apparently succumbing to this pressure, the federal government has said it may review the directive for the schools to now reopen mid-September after the minister of education would have consulted with the state commissioners of education. Though there appears to be some point on the issues raised by the proprietors, the comparison with churches and markets as a basis for the schools to reopen is highly circumscribed. For one, the segment of the population that go the school, the activities that take place within the school environment on one hand and the markets and the churches on the other differ very remarkably. For another, the schools in question are attended by very impressionable children some of then yet unable to differentiate between their right and left. Such children will be exposed to grave danger if the schools had been allowed business as usual. They are the intended beneficiaries of the shut-down. There is also no guarantee that

    proprietors would have done the needful if the stark reality of the danger which school children face on account of the outbreak was not forced on them through the shut down.

    Even then, the churches have also taken measures within the very limited time members congregate to reduce physical contacts among members. The Catholic Church which is not known to easily depart from its tradition has suspended the usual sharing of greetings during church services. It went further to introduce the receiving of Holy Communion by hand while giving those who prefer extant practice of receiving by mouth the option to continue. The Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos which introduced these measures following the outbreak of the virus was responding to the reality of the emerging situation.

    But just as the proprietors are opposed to the continued shutting down of schools, there are Catholics who find it hard to come to terms with the new reality. Whereas the school owners may have been influenced by the profit motive in demanding the reopening of the schools, those Catholics who oppose some of these changes are propelled by religious zeal and the reluctance to part ways with subsisting practices. Their position can be understood. There was also stiff opposition when the idea of conducting masses in English and vernacular as opposed to the Latin language was mooted. That has since come to stay and all is now history.

    This writer was really touched by a recent article in a national daily by a former junior colleague of mine Ifeanyi Alia. He had in that article kicked against the changes within the Catholic Church. He saw them as succumbing to the will of the devil and would want all Catholics to repose hope in God as His will, definitely will triumph over all evil machinations. Hear him, receiving “Holy Communion by hand is sacrilegious and any serious lay Catholic that resorts to it perhaps is either an agent of the devil or doing so wittingly or unwittingly to imperil his or her salvation” He essentially sees the outbreak of the virus as the handiwork of the devil which Catholics must resist by not abandoning their observances during mass.

    Though he reckoned that those practices have been prevalent in the advanced and developed countries of the world, but he rationalized it on the ground that such countries had fallen in the faith. He would therefore want African and Nigerian Catholics to remain the epitome of pristine observances and practices of the Catholic Church.

    The pains and frustrations of my friend can be understood. As some one seriously attached to his faith, it is not difficult why he sees these interim changes in the manner he has chosen to. He is entitled to his views no matter how extreme they may seem in the present circumstance. Incidentally, those countries he now seeks to disparage for spearheading the reception of the Holy Communion by hand were the ones that brought the religion to our shores.

    There is a limit beyond which this argument cannot be sustained because, it is essentially judgmental. And for all Christians, only God can judge on such issues. The salvation of Catholics has very little to do with the manner in which the Holy Communion is received especially when that practice has been modified by the same Catholic Church. If we do not take instructions from our Church leadership, who then should we rely for guidance? That is the contradiction in stretching this argument far.

    The issue that has been brought to the fore by all these is the kind of resistance that now confronts efforts to stem the spread of the Ebola disease. If we pander to all these dissenting views, we may find ourselves in a situation where the Ebola virus may soon overwhelm us all. Then, the society will turn round to blame the government. Proactive preventive measures taken by governments and all places of worship to stamp out the spread of the Ebola disease must not only be reinvigorated but seriously enforced. It is only a sound and healthy mind that can meaningfully participate in religious and school activities. A dead person neither attends schools nor churches. So if the schools needed to be shut much longer for us to achieve that objective, the end would turn out to justify the means.

  • Sierra Leone to impose four-day countrywide anti-Ebola ‘lock down’

    Sierra Leone to impose four-day countrywide anti-Ebola ‘lock down’

    SIERRA Leone will impose a four-day, countrywide ‘lockdown’ starting September 18, an escalation of efforts to halt the spread of Ebola across the West African country, a senior official in the president’s office said.

    The move underscores the radical steps West African nations are being pushed to take, over six months into an outbreak that is the worst on record and shows no sign of easing having already killed over 2,100 people since March.

    Citizens will not be allowed to leave their homes between September 18-21 in a bid to prevent the disease from spreading further and allow health workers to identify cases in the early stages of the illness, said Ibrahim Ben Kargbo, a presidential adviser on the country’s Ebola task force.

    “The aggressive approach is necessary to deal with the spread of Ebola once and for all,” he told Reuters.

    As of Friday, Sierra Leone has recorded 491 of the total of suspected, probable and confirmed Ebola deaths, according to UN figures.

    Kargbo said 21,000 people would be recruited to enforce the lockdown. Thousands of police and soldiers have already been deployed to enforce the quarantining of towns in Sierra Leone’s worst-hit regions near the border with Guinea.

    Organizations from across the world are rushing funds and equipment to West Africa, but Ebola is spreading faster than ever and experts say the lack of trained staff in weak health systems is a major obstacle to the response.