Tag: Liberian

  • PDP congratulates Liberian President-elect, Weah

    PDP congratulates Liberian President-elect, Weah

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Saturday congratulated the Liberian President-elect, George Weah on his victory in what it described as “keenly contested Presidential election.’’

    A statement issued by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Kola Ologbondiyan in Abuja, also congratulated all Liberians for a peaceful and successful transition.

    The peaceful transition according to the party is a testimony that democracy has taken firm roots not only in Liberia but also on the African continent.

    “Equally commendable is the commitment of the Liberian National Electoral Commission for its internal reforms that paved the way for a credible election in consonant with the wishes and aspirations of the people.’’

    Ologbondiyan said that Nigeria as a leader in the West African Sub-region, especially during the PDP rule, played key role in ensuring the political stability in Liberia.

    He said that Nigeria must continue to show direction by ensuring the consolidation of democratic practices and culture both at home and in other countries in the sub-region.

    The PDP urged the Chairman of the Independent National
    Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu to ensure credible elections in 2019, by insulating the commission from external interference.

    Ologbondiyan also urged the commission to ensure that it “weeds out all
    compromised officials’’, who could be used by undemocratic forces to try to subvert the will of the people.

    “Finally, we urge Nigerians to join in strengthening our democratic practice through active participation in political education and mobilisation to ensure an enduring electoral process’.

    Also read : Buhari congratulates George Weah

  • ZMapp fails to save Liberian as Briton’s treatment begins

    One of three African doctors infected with Ebola and treated with the experimental drug ZMapp has died in Monrovia, Liberia’s Information Minister, Lewis Brown, said on Monday.

    Asked to confirm the death of doctor Abraham Borbor, Brown said: “That is correct. He died yesterday.”

    Reuters reports that the hemorrhagic fever has killed at least 1,427 people, mostly in Sierra Leone, Liberia and neighbouring Guinea, the deadliest outbreak of the disease to date.

    The disease also has a toehold in Nigeria, where it has killed five people.

    Doctors at a hospital in north-west London have begun treating a Briton who contracted Ebola in Sierra Leone, the BBC reports.

    The man has been named as William Pooley, a 29-year-old volunteer nurse, by a United States’ scientist who worked with him.

    Mr. Pooley was flown to RAF Northolt in a specially equipped military aircraft on Sunday and taken under police escort to Hampstead’s Royal Free Hospital.

    He volunteered to go to West Africa to care for victims of the Ebola outbreak which has killed almost 1,500 people.

    It is the first confirmed case of a Briton contracting the virus during the current outbreak.

    Mr. Pooley, believed to be from Woodbridge in Suffolk, was flown out of Sierra Leone’s main airport in Lungi, in a RAF C-17 transport aircraft.

    He will be treated in a specialist isolation unit for patients with highly infectious disease, the only one of its kind in Europe.

    A special tent ensures medical staff can interact with the patient but are separated by plastic and rubber.

    Mr. Pooley was described by a colleague in Kenema district, Robert F Garry, as a “remarkable young man and a natural leader.”

    There is no cure for Ebola but with treatment of the symptoms, and proper hydration, patients have a chance of survival.

  • Ebola: How to protect yourself during vacation

    Ebola: How to protect yourself during vacation

    Nigerians were less perturbed about the outbreak of Ebola in West Africa until July 20, 2014 when the first case of the deadly virus disease was recorded – no thanks to a Liberian, Patrick Sawyer who brought the disease to Nigeria.

    Sadly, the recent Ebola outbreak has become a worldwide concern. While some may believe the best response is to declare a state of emergency — some countries have already been put on a travel ban list – it’s virtually impossible to completely halt movement. Sometimes you’ve just got to go, and we get that. Which is why it’s important to know how to protect yourself from the virus while moving around. An Online Hotel Booking Portal, Jovago.com has put together some information on how to stay safe from Ebola while on a trip.

    Ebola – What Do We Know?

    • It’s a fast-acting virus which causes a hemorrhagic fever – this means it causes internal and external bleeding – and is transmitted through direct contact with bodily fluids of infected people or animals (yes, animals)
    • Symptoms of the virus may appear anywhere from 2 to 21 days after exposure, but most commonly within 8-10 days
    • It has no cure or vaccine, yet
    • People who display early symptoms can only be treated for those symptoms with hopes of recovery
    • Thankfully, Ebola is not airborne and can only be spread by people who are already displaying severe symptoms of the virus – bleeding from the nose or mouth

    The average traveler should be at no risk, but that doesn’t mean one shouldn’t take precautions because you never really know.

    How to Protect Yourself?

    Simple measures can make the biggest difference

    • Always wash your hands with soap and only eat food cooked properly
    • Sanitize your environment and carry a hand sanitizer with you as well; the virus cannot survive disinfectants, direct sunlight, and heat
    • Avoid bodily contact with people on a trip, this one is nearly impossible, but you can try; Remember: Sweat is a bodily fluid
    • Watch what you eat on trips, avoid roadside snacks such as kebabs and pastries as much as you can; Make sure what you eat is prepared under sanitary conditions
    • Visit a health facility anytime you have fever, headache, pain, diarrhea, red eyes rash and vomiting
    • Educate yourself and everyone around you about the virus – You can never know too much and every little bit you do know could be helpful to someone else
    • If you notice symptoms in yourself or someone else, don’t panic and don’t delay; Report to the nearest healthcare facility immediately
    • Do not play with monkeys or baboons
    • Do not eat plums eaten by bats

    Doctors around the world are working on a cure. Meanwhile, be safe. Protect yourself and those around you. Avoid huge crowds of people and don’t go anywhere you don’t need to be. We wish you a nice holiday season. Stay healthy!

    Source: Jovago.com

  • Another Lagos nurse tests positive for Ebola

    Another Lagos nurse tests positive for Ebola

    Another Lagos nurse has been tested positive to Ebola Virus Disease 22 days after the first case of the virus was recorded.

    The newly wedded nurse was among the people that had direct contact with the late Liberian, Patrick Sawyer.

    According to the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, the nurse  husband is among the 177 people placed under surveillance.

    He said nine people have so far developed EVD, thus bringing the total number of cases in Nigeria to 10.  Two of these two have died – that is the Liberian and the nurse while eight are alive and currently on treatment.

  • Riot police called  to quell Liberia  Ebola protest

    Riot police called to quell Liberia Ebola protest

    LIBERIAN authorities say riot police were dispatched to a protest against the government’s handling of the Ebola outbreak.

    Angry demonstrators yesterday blocked the country’s busiest highway because authorities had not collected the bodies of some Ebola victims.

    Residents said the bodies had been lying by the roadside for two days in Weala, 76 kilometers northeast of the capital, Monrovia.

    Information Minister Lewis Brown sounded a warning on state radio telling the demonstrators “police are on their way to you.”

    The latest Ebola outbreak is the largest and longest ever recorded for the disease and so far has killed at least 961 people, the U.N. health agency said Friday. It emerged in Guinea in March and has since spread to Sierra Leone, Liberia and Nigeria.

  • Liberian with Ebola-like symptoms dies in Lagos

    Liberian with Ebola-like symptoms dies in Lagos

    The  Liberian who was  hospitalised in Lagos for suspected  Ebola virus has  died, the Lagos State government announced  yesterday.

    The  Commissioner for Health Dr. Jide Idris,his Information and Strategy counterpart, Mr. Aderemi Ibirogba, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Public Health, Dr. Yewande Adeshina and the Special Adviser on Information and Strategy Mr. Raji Lateef  confirmed to reporters that  the Lberian, Patrick Sawyer, 40, tested positive to Ebola virus disease in the test conducted in the country.

    He was a consultant to his country’s ministry of finace.

    He arrived in Nigeria  on Sunday and was admitted to hospital after suffering from severe vomiting and diarrhoea.

    He was subsequently quarantined   because his symptoms were associated with the virus which has killed more than 650 people across West Africa in recent months, the worst-ever outbreak since Ebola first emerged in 1976.

    Dr.Idris  said the immediate task before government now is now to dispose of the body ‘properly’  and identify  and treat everyone  who had  contact with the deceased.

    He said: ”There is  protocol.The people involved, we are talking with the hospital involved, the staff  over there.After dealing with the body we have to deal with the hospital, to sanitize the hospital, more importantly too there is the need for us to do contact tracing. We are doing that with the World Health Organization people .We are going to trace all the contacts that the man came in with on the air plane ,where they went to.

    “ Since we have got the manifest , we are going to trace all of them .Ech one of them is going to be questioned.There is protocol for questioning  and they are going to be followed in the next 21 days to see if any one of them develops  any symptom.This is what we are in the process of doing. “

    He said appropriate personnel have been deployed at the borders, seaports and  airports in Lagos with a view to ensuring that infected people are not allowed to spread the virus.

    Idris urged Lagos residents not to panic over the situation, saying treatment centers will be set up to deal with possible spread of the disease.

    Liberia has recorded 172 cases of the disease, including 105 deaths, since the outbreak began.

    Experts say that limiting the spread of the virus in a chaotic mega-city like Lagos  poses added complications compared to infections in more rural areas.

    Ebola is believed to be carried by animals hunted for meat, notably bats.

    It spreads among humans via bodily fluids including sweat, meaning you can get sick from simply touching an infected person.

    With no vaccine, patients believed to have caught the virus must be isolated to prevent further contagion.

    In Sierra Leone, officials yesterday appealed for help to trace the first known resident in the capital with Ebola whose family forcibly removed her from a Freetown hospital after testing positive for the deadly disease.

    Radio stations in Freetown, a city of around 1 million inhabitants, broadcast the appeal to locate a woman who tested positive for the disease that has killed 660 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone since an outbreak was first identified in February.

    “Saudatu Koroma of 25 Old Railway Line, Brima Lane, Wellington,” the announcement said. “She is a positive case and her being out there is a risk to all. We need the public to help us locate her.”

    Koroma, 32, a resident of the densely populated Wellington neighbourhood, had been admitted to an isolation ward while blood samples were tested for the virus, Health ministry spokesman Sidi Yahya Tunis. The results came back on Thursday.

    “The family of the patient stormed the hospital and forcefully removed her and took her away,” Tunis said. “We are searching for her.”

    Fighting one of the world’s deadliest diseases is straining the region’s weak health systems, while a lack of information and suspicion of medical staff has led many to shun treatment.

    Earlier this year, a man in Freetown tested positive for Ebola although he is believed to have caught it elsewhere.

    According to health ministry data and officials, dozens of people confirmed by laboratory tests to have Ebola are now unaccounted for in Sierra Leone, where the majority of cases have been recorded in the country’s east.

    While international medical organisations have deployed experts to the field in an attempt to contain the outbreak, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said poor health infrastructure and a lack of manpower were hindering their efforts.

    “We’re seeing many of these facilities simply don’t have enough people to provide the constant level of care needed,” WHO spokesman Paul Garwood told a news briefing in Geneva on Friday.

    There is no cure or vaccine for Ebola, which causes diarrhoea, vomiting and internal and external bleeding. It can kill up to 90 percent of those infected, although the mortality rate of the current outbreak is around 60 percent.

    The West African outbreak is the first time that Ebola, which was first discovered in what is now Democratic Republic of Congo in 1976, has appeared in heavily populated urban areas and international travel hubs.

    Cases have already been confirmed in Conakry and Monrovia, the capital cities of Guinea and Liberia.

    The Nigeria Medical Association, (NMA) Lagos Chapter, yesterday offered to partner the Lagos State government on the suspected case of Ebola Virus Disease to prevent an outbreak.

    Its chairman, Dr Tayo Ojo ,speaking  at the inaugural briefing of the newly elected executives of the association in Lagos said the association owes it a duty ensure that the state is free of the virus.

    But he advised the public  to imbibe environmental and personal hygiene culture.