Tag: World Health Organisation

  • Drug, food counterfeiters may face life imprisonment – Saraki

    Drug, food counterfeiters may face life imprisonment – Saraki

    The President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, has said that individuals convicted of producing and selling counterfeit and fake drugs as well as unwholesome processed foods may be jailed for life.

    Saraki, who spoke at the public hearing on a Bill for an Act to Amend the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs and Unwholesome Processed Foods Act, added that such convicts could be fined up to two million naira.

    He further said that upon conviction, assets acquired by such persons would be forfeited to the Federal Government.

    According to him, the amendment of the law is aimed at strengthening punishments for persons involved in such unwholesome practices.

    “In 2008, thousands of Nigerian children started taking a teething medicine that contained toxic chemicals.

    “By February 2009 over 90 Nigerian babies had died from consuming the mixture. This is despicable, and to say the least, unacceptable,’’ he said.

    The president of the Senate stressed that the amendment of the law would provide Nigerians food security, disease free society and required standards for soil sciences.

    The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Sen. Olanrewaju Tejuoso, said the Senate had continued to give opportunity to Nigerians to contribute their quota to matters of national importance, particularly health.

    He said that the World Health Organisation had reported that about 32 billion dollars was lost to drug counterfeiting business in 2004 and 40 billion dollars in 2006.

    “There is need to enact new legislation or amend the weak or already existing ones to see that the lives of the citizens of this nation are protected,’’ he said.

    Tejuoso said that the increased level of fake products in the Nigerian market was alarming.

    He added that “there are several fake products like fake cosmetics, fake registered appliances, fake spare-parts, fake brushes, fake designer shoes and the list is literally endless.

    “The effect is far reaching because it is a matter of life and death.

    “Some of the major causes of fake drugs and counterfeiting include corruption, inadequate technology for the protection of the identity of genuine drugs as well as lack of vigilance and advocacy by the healthcare providers.

    “Combating this menace requires serious efforts,” he said.

    According to him, about 50 per cent of drugs bought from private places, such as pharmacies, patent medicine stores and street vendors, are more susceptible to counterfeiting unlike those from the public health sector.

    “According to late Dora Akunyili of blessed memory, the negative impact of fake drugs from the society is more than that of either narcotic agents but the combined effects of malaria, HIV/AIDS and armed robbery,” he said.

  • Malaria deaths rise in Angola

    Malaria deaths rise in Angola

    The World Health Organisation said deaths from malaria in Angola this year has outstrip 2015 crisis.

    It said on Tuesday in Luanda that it has become another health crisis like yellow fever outbreaks in decades.

    Hernando Ospina, WHO’s Angola Representative, said the Country recorded 2,915 deaths from malaria in the first quarter of this year, compared with 8,000 for the whole of 2015 and 5,500 the previous year.

    “This new malaria outbreak has devastated the entire country, even in provinces that have low endemic prevalence we are seeing the spread and surge in cases.

    Ospina said uncollected garbage in Luanda due to government budget cuts and a record amount of rainfall had contributed to high cases of malaria, yellow fever and chronic diarrhoea.

    He noted that two weeks ago yellow fever outbreak killed not fewer than 225 people in Angola and 21 in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Ospina warned that the epidemic poses a global threat.

  • Riders for health

    Riders for health


    There is no denial that the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United Nations (UN) and many other non‐governmental organisations (NGOs) as well as various parastatals have engaged in endless struggles to provide health care for mothers and children across less privileged communities in Africa.

    Interestingly, the more these health organisations make efforts, the less it seems they are doing greatly in reducing maternal and child mortality, thus, the need for ‘Riders for Health’.

    According to United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reports in 2014, Nigeria loses about 2, 300 of her under‐five year old children per day, which is approximately 839,500 children in a year.

    The same report has it that 145 pregnant women reportedly die either at child birth or after child birth per day. And this amounts to 52, 925 women per year.

    Given this statistics, Nigeria ‐ like many other African countries – ranks high as one of the countries with large contribution to the under‐five and maternal mortality rates in the world.

    Worthy of mention here is the fact that many of these deaths could be prevented if aid gets to those who need them, regardless of their locations – rural or urban settlement.

    It is largely true that the coverage and quality of health care service delivered to communities that are at the outskirts or in far rural areas has continued to fail both women and children in Nigeria. Thus, the need to introduce a project called: ‘Riders for Health’.

    ‘Riders for Health’ is an international social enterprise that strives to manage and maintain vehicles for health‐focused partners in sub‐Saharan Africa with the view of delivering health care services to communities far from cities.

    The expertise to be put in place by this project in transport management will enable health workers deliver vital health care to rural communities on a reliable and cost‐effective basis.

    The need for Riders for health became pertinent considering the challenges faced by health care givers in reaching communities that are far removed from urban settlements.

    What this means is that, not only that those members of communities that are far from cities often struggle in vain to get health care, even health care workers likewise struggle in a bid to save affected Riders for Health employs the use of every form of motor‐vehicles to deliver health care facilities as well as move health care givers to concerned communities.

    Among the motor‐vehicles that would be employed by this project include motorcycles, ambulances and other four‐wheel vehicles used in the delivery of health care in seven countries across Africa.

    These countries include Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and The Gambia.

    The project is in collaboration with ministries of health, international and African NGOs, private‐sector organisations, local community‐based organisations and religious groups, to improve access to health care,

    Furthermore, it is important to note here that the project has the capacity to take care of an estimated 14 million people across the seven African countries mentioned above.

    For example, one single motor‐vehicle plus one rider has the capacity to cover 56.7 kilometers and beyond within a month covering a total of 5.1 million people.

    At the core of this community‐focused project is both training and preventive vehicle maintenance. The essence for running reliable vehicle fleets cannot be separated from the need to ensure that the chain in health care delivery is never broken by failing vehicles thereby increasing health workers’

    The same way, prevention is better than cure in human health, so is maintenance better than repair for automobiles, hence the need for constant maintenance, which is also cheaper to keep a vehicle running efficiently over time than to repair it when it breaks down completely.

    The programmes have been designed to provide training and employment opportunities to build local  a project focusing on human health, the service of highly skilled technicians becomes vital to regularly travel to service vehicles in the communities in which health workers serve.

    In addition to training health workers to drive safely in the difficult terrain, there would also be training for them on how to carry out daily checks on their vehicles.

    It worthy of note to mention that majority of the population of sub‐Saharan Africans live in rural areas where the best roads are little more than dirt tracks.

    Public transport is infrequent and delivering health care on foot or by bicycle between sparse villages is an exhausting and ineffective task.

    Simply put, without reliable transportation system, the millions of pounds invested in vaccines, drugs, bed‐nets, condoms and to train health professionals every year will be wasted because they will fail to get to where they are needed on time.

    There is therefore every reason for this project to achieve the set goal in order to have a safe and healthy world.

  • Handwashing rates lowest in low-income countries – UNICEF

    Handwashing rates lowest in low-income countries – UNICEF

    • Lack of access to hygiene could endanger new Development Agenda

    A report from the The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF has proven that handwashing with soap is dangerously low in many countries.

    This report is in spite of UNICEF’s proven benefits of child health.

    The eighth Global Handwashing Day comes less than a month after the United Nations (UN) adopted the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including hygiene for the first time in the global agenda.

    One of the SDGs targets is to achieve ‘access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene’ by 2030.

    UNICEF says improvements in hygiene must supplement access to water and sanitation, or children will continue to fall victim to easily preventable diseases like diarrhoea.

    “Along with drinking water and access to toilets, hygiene (particularly, handwashing with soap) is the essential third leg of the stool holding up the Goal on water and sanitation,” said Sanjay Wijesekera, Global Head of UNICEF’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Programmes.

    “From birth (when the unwashed hands of birth attendants can transmit dangerous pathogens) right through babyhood, school and beyond, handwashing is crucial for a child’s health. It is one of the cheapest, simplest and the most effective health interventions we have.”

     

    Sub-Saharan Africa, the region with the highest child mortality rates globally, also has particularly low levels of handwashing. The latest report from UNICEF and WHO says that in 38 countries in the region with available data, levels are at best 50 per cent.

     

    Even health care facilities often lack places for handwashing. Some 42 per cent of them in World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Africa Region have no water source available within 500 meters.

     

    Meanwhile, according to the UN’s latest estimates, over 800 of the approximately 1,400 child deaths from diarrhoea each day can be attributed to inadequate water, sanitation or hygiene. Infants in the first month of life are particularly vulnerable to diseases transmitted by unwashed hands.

    A number of activities around the world will mark Global Handwashing Day and aim to teach the importance of handwashing with soap especially to children. Which are as follows:

     

    • Democratic Republic of the Congo: A national drawing competition on handwashing in schools will reach 300,000 students in 1,500 schools; and messages will reach 3,000,000 people in 5,500 villages.

     

    • Haiti: A soccer match (Clean Hands vs. Dirty Hands) is planned, as well as a parade, community radio spots, songs, poems, a drawing competition and handwashing demonstrations in public places.

     

    • Kiribati: All 94 Primary Schools, 24 Junior Secondary Schools and 16 Senior Secondary Schools will take part in group hand washing. Students will design posters and banners, and promote handwashing in marches, song, dancing, drama, speech, poems and art.

     

    • Sri Lanka: The Government of Sri Lanka is hosting a week-long learning exchange among schools to establish best practice for programmes across Asia and the Pacific. UNICEF Ambassador for South Asia, cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, will be involved in promoting the importance of handwashing.

     

    • Viet Nam: 8,000 children will participate in an event aimed at helping them to encourage their families to practice handwashing with soap.
  • ‘Breastfeeding is for babies, not husbands’

    ‘Breastfeeding is for babies, not husbands’

    [dropcap]L[/dropcap]agos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof Wale Oke has urged men to stop competing with their babies to suck the wives’ breast. Oke enjoined the men to allow their babies to enjoy their natural meal.

    He spoke yesterday at the World Breastfeeding Week (WBW). The programme was organised by LASUTH Community Health Department in conjunction with the hospital’s Pediatrics.

    According to him, the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding are many.

    He said: “When a mother breastfeeds her baby, it creates bond between them. It is also a natural family mechanism as mothers cannot get pregnant. Breastfeeding mothers do not have bone diseases, breast and ovarian cancers.”

    Oke said the state has created an enabling environment for mothers with its policies to work and still feed their babies.

    “Working and breastfeeding can go together if mothers try because it is necessary to have healthy babies,” he said.

    Wife of Lagos State Governor, Mrs Bolanle Ambode urged mothers to breastfeed their babies exclusively for six months so that they can be healthy.

    This, according to her, will prevent babies from coming down with childhood diseases, such as cough, diarrhea and catarrh, among others.

    Mrs Amode, represented by the Permanent Secretary of the state’s Civil Service Pension Office, Mrs Ademola Olabowale, said medical science has made it known that breast supplies basic nutrients to newborns, adding that the breast milk remains the most important protein for babies’ growth.

    “The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends exclusive breastfeeding for six months, and mixed breastfeeding up to two years,” she said.

    Breast milk, she said, usually helps to build the immunity for the newborns, saying it would protect them from childhood killer diseases.

    The state government, she said, has reviewed maternity leave for women in the state Civil Service from three to six months, adding that Lagos State is the only state in Nigeria where men go on paternity leave to support their wives with the burden of raising a new baby.

    Head of Department, Community Health Dr Yetunde Kuyinu said the week would help to improve babies’ health.

    She said the WBW is celebrated every year from August 1st to 7th in more than 170 countries to encourage breastfeeding and improve the health of babies.

    She said working mothers can actually breastfeed their babies.

    “It is a known fact that many of our working class nursing mothers face a lot of challenges combining breastfeeding with work either at their work setting or at home. They tend to stop breastfeeding very early in the life of their babies, thus losing the dual benefits breastfeeding provides for both mother and child,” she said.

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  • Increasing upside potential for May & Baker

    Increasing upside potential for May & Baker

    The recent certification of May & Baker Nigeria’s production processes to be of World Health Organisation (WHO)’s current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) opens a vast opportunity for the healthcare company

    May & Baker Nigeria Plc achieved another milestone recently with the issuance of ‘current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP)’ certificate of the World Health Organisation (WHO) to the healthcare company. The first pharmaceutical company to be certified by the International Standard Organisation (ISO), the cGMP was another pace-setting achievement by the healthcare company.

    The cGMP affirms that May & Baker Nigeria is a pharmaceutical manufacturing company with adequate facilities and processes that meet global standards. The announcement, which was formally communicated to May & Baker Nigeria recently by the world health ruling body, caps a deliberate and sustained effort by the company to seek international accreditation and certification for its production processes and products.

    The road to the WHO GMP certification began as far back as 2008 when May & Baker commenced the construction of a world class manufacturing facility at Ota, Ogun State. The facility, which was commissioned in 2011 by President Goodluck Jonathan, was designed to meet all requirements of international pharmaceutical manufacturing best practice, from civil works to equipment installations, quality assurance, input supply and production processes.

    In 2012, the company formally applied to the WHO for GMP certification. May & Baker Nigeria’s Pharmacentre was inspected by WHO experts four times between 2012 and 2014 in the course of mandatory and advisory inspections. In all inspections, positive reports were made about the Pharmacentre, while improvements to processes, documentation and further training were carried out. In September, 2014, the WHO finally gave a nod to the company as having met the requirements for GMP certification.

    The certification opens a vast opportunity for global drug contract manufacturing to May & Baker, whose Ota, Ogun State-based manufacturing complex known as The Pharmacentre was designed and positioned as the most modern pharmaceutical factory in the West African region. Nigerian pharmaceutical firms previously were not in a position to participate in international tenders for medicines against the three pandemics that require WHO prequalification. Health experts identified this as a major constraint on the local supply of medicines, especially anti-retroviral (ARVs) drugs, anti-malarial and anti-tuberculosis agents.

    With another enviable position as the first and only Nigerian company with local vaccine production, the cGMP places May & Baker Nigeria in a better position ahead of other healthcare company to compete effectively for many lines of drugs. May & Baker’s business is already structured to optimize the synergies and cross-selling opportunities in the general healthcare industry. May & Baker operates under three major business units and four subsidiaries. The business units are pharmaceutical manufacturing, beverages and foods. The four subsidiaries included Biovaccines Nigeria Limited, Osworth Nigeria Limited, Servisure Nigeria Limited and Tydipacks Nigeria Limited. Biovaccines is a joint venture with the Federal Government for local production of human vaccines. May & Baker Nigeria meanwhile owns the controlling equity stake in Biovaccines. The vaccine project, when fully operational, is expected not only to save Nigeria huge revenues but also create immense room for revenue and profit growth for May & Baker Nigeria. The three other subsidiaries-Servisure, Osworth and Tydipacks are brand-owning healthcare companies.

    The pharmaceutical manufacturing business runs concurrently from two factory locations-Ikeja, Lagos State and Ota, Ogun state. Based in Ikeja are a liquid manufacturing plant, solid manufacturing plant, an ARV plant and Bectaletam plant. The total capacity for solid medicines in Ikeja is two billion tablets while there is capacity for 19 million bottles of liquid preparations of 60 ml. The new pharmaceutical plant in Ota, the Pharmacentre, has capacity to produce 4.5 billion tablets and 37.5 million bottles of 60 ml liquid preparations annually. Thus, the combined capacity of May & Baker’s pharmaceutical business is in excess of 6.5 billion tablets and 56.5 million bottles of liquid preparations per annum for a range of over 80 products. The beverage business is located in Ikeja and is currently involved in the bottling of Lily table water while the food business produces instant noodles-Mimee Noodles.

    The cGMP is expected to add fillips to the company’s earnings. While it remains under cost pressure due to extended funding for the Pharmacentre, the audited report of the company showed a steady performance. Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of the company for the year ended December 31, 2013 indicated a growth of 12.3 per cent in sales.  Turnover rose from N5.67 billion in 2012 to N6.37 billion in 2013. Gross profit also increased by 9.2 per cent from N2.07 billion to N2.26 billion. However, the company remained under pressures from financing charges, the main downside to the huge new pharmaceutical manufacturing plant, which was financed largely by loans. Finance costs rose by 34.3 per cent to N630.71 million in 2013 compared with N469.63 million in 2012, leading to a negative pre-tax profit of N11 million.

    Already, the company is considering options to reduce its financial leverage and restructure its balance sheet. It plans to raise new equity funds and recapitalize its balance. In a recent review, managing director, May & Baker Nigeria Plc, Mr. Nnamdi Okafor, said the company needs new equity funds to support the long-term growth of its business and reduce the high cost of fund, which has been constraining its profit in recent years.

    He however pointed out that the journey to WHO’s prequalification of products is not yet over as the company would soon commence the next stage which will involve the presentation of specific products for prequalification by WHO.

    He said the company has been receiving several enquiries from prospective clients who want to use its world-class pharmaceutical manufacturing centre for their drug manufacturing adding that the cGMP would encourage more customers.

    “We want to build a company that is strong, stable and globally relevant by setting up strong institutions and strong brands. We have launched May & Baker on the path of sustainable and profitable diversification,” Okafor assured.

    The certification and structural repositioning of its businesses and balance sheet of May & Baker Nigeria enhance the prospects of the company in the expanding healthcare industry. With population of more than 170 million people, Nigeria’s growing population and huge gap between healthcare needs and actual provisions present huge opportunities for companies with extensive capacity for research and capital for investments. Besides, Nigerian healthcare industry has witnessed many landmark changes in recent years including a law that mandates compulsory health scheme for employees and a step-up in the anti-counterfeit and substandard campaign.

  • Why Ebola must be contained, by global NGOs

    Why Ebola must be contained, by global NGOs

    Some international non-governmental organisation have expressed concern over the Ebola crisis in Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

    They said the spread of the disease could  set the countries’ progress back a decade.

    In a statement, the Save the Children, Plan, Oxfam, Catoholic Relief Services (CRS) and Child Fund Alliance, called for increased financial investment to ensure that the World Health Organisation (WHO) Roadmap and United Nations (UN) Overview of Needs and Requirements are fully funded to ensure a scaled-up response

    “Without concerted and immediate international action to tackle this crisis, the outbreak could see these countries’ hard-fought for progress set back years, bringing the healthcare system to its knees and, for Liberia and Sierra Leone, back to levels not seen since the end of their respective civil wars,” according to the groups.

    While millions of children worldwide start their new school year this week, filled with excitement and hope, in their view, the classrooms in Ebola-affected countries remain eerily quiet, as communities are forced into quarantine for the foreseeable future. Many other countries in West Africa are currently on alert.

    “Vacant farmland has not been ploughed in time for next year’s harvest, raising real concerns that families will not be able to provide for loved ones over the coming months. Over-crowded rural clinics are being forced to turn away pregnant mothers and young children suffering from malaria, tuberculosis and other life-threatening diseases. With extremely limited or no medical facilities or trained doctors to help contain the outbreak, the Governments of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone are doing all they can to contain the epidemic. Even before the current crisis, Liberia had just 51 medical doctors to serve a population of 3.7 million people, and Sierra Leone also had one of the lowest number of health workers per capita in the world.

    “All three affected countries are, to varying degrees, still recovering from protracted conflicts and facing challenges posed by widespread poverty. The sheer scale and impact of the Ebola crisis threatens the very progress they have fought so hard to achieve. As international development organisations, we will continue to do all we can to support the people and Governments of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, namely by providing highly-trained personnel, medical equipment, and by supporting communities, but we do not yet have the means to respond effectively to an epidemic of this scale.”

    They commended the efforts of the government of the three countries, but, called for the deployment of specialist medical teams with biohasard capacity to support containment and case management in the countries.

    “We welcome the leadership shown by certain governments so far in responding to the crisis. But a further and massive increase in financing, personnel, and expert capacity is urgently needed if we are serious about stopping the spread of Ebola. Without this, thousands more children, adults, and health workers will die unnecessarily and the long term economic impact of this crisis will be felt for years to come.

    “We are calling on World leaders to:deploy disaster response and specialist medical teams with biohazard capacity to support containment and case management in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea; increase financial investment to ensure that the WHO Roadmap and UN Overview of Needs and Requirements are fully funded to ensure a scaled-up response, and commit to investing in and strengthening the healthcare sector, in order to build back stronger, more resilient healthcare systems and communities,” the group said.

  • ‘Why babies must breastfeed’

    Head of Nutrition, Federal Ministry of Health, Dr Chris Isokpunwu has described good nutrition as a pre-requisite for national development.

    Dr  Isokpunwu, who spoke at a joint programme on Breastfeeding by Nestle and National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), said poor breastfeeding could impact negatively on  a child’s health.

    According to him, good nutrition for a baby starts from when the woman gets pregnant with the mother getting the required nutrients.

    “After delivery, babies should be fed with colostrum before 30 minutes. This is good for child and mother. The baby gets needed protection by taking that first breast milk. It also allows the mother to lactate better,” he said.

    Dr Isokpunwu described breast milk as the most nutritionally sound food for babies.

    “It is easy to digest and help strengthen baby’s natural defence as well as prevent disease. It also ensures development and growth,” he said.

    Isokpunwu said the Federal Government introduced breast milk strategy marketing and regulation to promote only breast feeding. It also instituted baby friendly initiative and training of health workers.

    “There was breastfeeding campaign and infant and young child feeding programme,” he said.

    Professor of Neonatology, Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) Chinyere Ezeaka described breast feeding as an ancient art and modern miracle. “It is the key to maternal, newborn and child health”, she noted.

    She said women should breastfeed babies with two-third of their areola touching the babies’ mouths.

    The neonatologist said babies must be given colostrum, even if their mothers delivered them through caesarian section (CS). “Colostrum is dense in antibodies and most appropriate for them,” she said.

    Mrs Ezeaka said malnutrition is a major societal and economic problem. She said breastfeeding is a human rights issue because no child should be denied breast milk.

    Breastfeeding, she said, is linked to all the eight millennium development goals (MDGs).

    This, she said, was why the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommended exclusive breastfeeding for babies for the first six months of life and additional complementary feeding for two years and above.

    Ezeaka said 80 per cent of brain development in babies is achieved in their first two years.

  • ‘Ebola vaccine   could be rushed through for 2015’

    ‘Ebola vaccine could be rushed through for 2015’

    Hospitals in Europe are preparing for the possible spread of Ebola out of Africa as the World Health Organisation said a vaccine could be ‘rushed through’ by early next year.

    Doctors at the specialised quarantine unit at Berlin’s Charite hospital today showed off their readiness, amid news that two Germans could be carrying the deadly virus.

    One suspected victim was yesterday in isolation at a Hamburg hospital after coming down with a fever after a visit to Sierra Leone, where the virus has claimed 12 lives.

    Another, a German medical student currently in Rwanda, is said to be showing signs of the disease, though should he in fact have Ebola it is so far unclear whether he would be flown to Germany for treatment.

    Further east, soldiers from the Czech army Biological Defence Centre were also seen drilling for a possible Ebola outbreak in the Czech Republic.

    They practised infection control, setting up quarantine areas and treating dummy ‘patients’ in the fear that the virus could spread to Eastern Europe. Their centre near Jablonné nad Orlicí, close to the border with Poland, is one of the few prepared to deal with a possible Ebola outbreak in the region.

    And in China, border authorities have stepped up their infection control and quarantine facilities. As it rises to global economic dominance China has increased its trade with resource-rich African nations, increasing the possibility that an infected person could travel between the two countries.

    Fears of the spread of the disease are not entirely unfounded. In the past few days news has emerged of a Romanian man who has been put in isolation in a hospital in Bucharest that specialises in infectious diseases on suspicion of having contracted Ebola in Nigeria.

    And in Spain, officials said a Catholic priest infected with Ebola will be treated with an experimental drug already used on two repatriated Americans.

    The drug, called ZMapp, arrived at Madrid’s La Paz-Carlos III hospital, where the 75-year-old missionary was being treated in isolation, the health ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

    The Roman Catholic priest, Miguel Pajares, was one of three people who tested positive for Ebola at the Saint Joseph Hospital in Monrovia where he worked.

    Ebola symptoms are similar to those of flu, and include fever, weakness, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, vomiting, diarrhea, rash, and finally bleeding and death.

    The preparations came as the WHO said a potential vaccine for the Ebola virus is being tested on humans and could be ready for widespread use by early 2015.

    The hope for a breakthrough came as experts from affected countries prepared to meet this afternoon to discuss the use of experimental therapies for the illness.

    Ebola kills 90 per cent of people who catch it, Western victims who have been flown home to their native countries have been given a new and experimental drug called Zmapp that could offer better chances of survival.

    But doses of Zmapp are scarce, with a spokesman for the WHO telling MailOnline that at the moment there are just ‘a few doses of these drugs in Western labs’.

    There is currently no licensed cure or vaccine for Ebola, one of the deadliest known viruses, but Marie-Paule Kieny, assistant director-general of the UN health agency, told AFP she expected a vaccine to be rushed through.

    ‘I think it’s realistic’ to expect it to be available by 2015, said Ms Kieny.

    Jean-Marie Okwo Bele, vaccine chief at WHO, told French radio RFI on Saturday that British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline appeared set to start clinical trials of a vaccine next month.

    He also said he was optimistic about making the vaccine commercially available.

    ‘Since this is an emergency, we can put emergency procedures in place … so that we can have a vaccine available by 2015,’ he was quoted as saying by AFP.

    Nearly 1,000 people have died so far in West Africa in the worst outbreak of Ebola ever.

    Health officials will meet for a video conference hosted by the WHO to discuss whether experimental treatments like Zmapp can be used in the efforts to contain the outbreak.

    Three of the world’s leading Ebola specialists have already called for the experimental drug to be offered to infected people in West Africa.

    Pointing out that the drug had been made available to Western patients before they were evacuated to their native countries, Peter Piot, who co-discovered Ebola in 1976, has said Africans should get the same chance.

    But WHO spokesman Fadéla Chaib told MailOnline that the main question was whether it was ethical to use treatments in the field that have never before been tested on humans.

    ‘If yes,’ she said, ‘who will get these very scarce treatments?’

    She denied suggestions that there was an inequality in access to the new drugs, saying that is was not a question of ‘white and black’.

    ‘How can you recommend using untested treatments on people in the middle of an outbreak?’ she asked. ‘We are talking about two people getting these treatments, but you don’t know what will happen if there are hundreds of people getting them.’

    She added that the potential side effects of Zmapp on the elderly, pregnant women and people with underlying conditions were not yet known.

    The race to find effective treatments for Ebola comes as governments in West Africa warned that people could begin starving as travel restrictions cause food shortages and soaring prices.

    ‘We are trying to cope,’ said Joseph Kelfalah, the mayor of Kenema, in an eastern district of Sierra Leone that is under strict quarantine along with nearby Kailahun, but he added that food prices were ‘escalating’.

    Under the country’s ‘Operation Octopus’, some 1,500 soldiers and police have been deployed to enforce the quarantines, turning people away at checkpoints and accompanying health workers searching for people who may have contracted the virus.

    ‘Only essential officials and food items are being allowed in after intensive searches,’ deputy police chief Karrow Kamara told AFP.

    Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea are the countries hardest hit by the epidemic, which the UN World Health Organization has called an international health emergency.

    Liberia has been particularly affected by food shortages since declaring its state of emergency on Wednesday. It, too, has deployed soldiers to restrict movement, notably from the worst-affected northern provinces to the capital Monrovia.

    Sando Johnson, a senator in the province of Bomi, northwest of Monrovia, said the restrictions were ‘severe’ and warned people would die of starvation if they are not relaxed.

    ‘My country has been completely quarantined because soldiers don’t allow anyone to get out of the area and they don’t allow anyone to go there,’ he told AFP by telephone.

    ‘A bag of rice that sold for 1,300 LD ($14; £9) is now selling for 1,800 LD. The poor people will die of hunger, for God’s sake.’

    Health workers have been tasked with raising awareness about the disease which causes fever and, in the worst cases, unstoppable bleeding.

    An emergency helpline set up by Liberia’s Ebola taskforce to provide information on the virus had received 1,800 calls by Friday.

    ‘Aside from lots of confusion, aside from sick persons, aside from the fact that we also want to create awareness, this call centre is there to create calm but to also disseminate information and to gather information that can be shared with the national task force,’ said Barkue Tubman, a spokesman for the centre in Monrovia.

    The virus is spread by close contact with an infected person through bodily fluids such as sweat, blood and tissue.

    In Sierra Leone, 10 motorcycle taxi drivers have been infected after unknowingly carrying Ebola patients, according to the president of the National Bike Riders Association, David Sesay.

    The two-wheeled taxis, which put rider and passenger in close contact, are an indispensable form of transport in remote areas of west Africa.

    Efforts to halt the epidemic have been stymied by ignorance, distrust of Westerners and false rumours.

    Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has warned against spreading false information ‘which can lead to mass hysteria, panic and misdirection’.

    Meanwhile, the disease appears to be spreading from its crucible in the West African countries of Guinea, Libera and Sierra Leone.

    The first ‘suspected case’ was reported in Senegal, where a 27-year-old man with Ebola-like symptoms was placed in isolation in a hospital in the north of the country. The man later tested negative for the virus, a health official said.

    Nigeria, West Africa’s richest and most-populous country, has reported 13 confirmed, probable or suspected cases of Ebola, whose incubation period ranges from two to 21 days.

    It suspended flights into the country by the Gambian national airline on Sunday, saying the company’s efforts to screen for the virus were ‘unsatisfactory’.