Friday, 24 October 2014

Ebola crisis: Mali confirms first infection case

courtesy BBC

Health worker in Mali. Photo: 9 October 2014 Health officials in Mali have been checking people returning from the Ebola-hit countries in West Africa
The Mali government has confirmed the first case of Ebola in the country.
It said a two-year-old girl had tested positive for the haemorrhagic virus. She recently returned from neighbouring Guinea.
More than 4,800 people have died of Ebola - mainly in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone - since March.
Meanwhile, an international team of scientists has been set up to determine the effectiveness of using the blood of Ebola survivors as a treatment.
It is hoped the antibodies used by the immune system to fight Ebola can be transferred from a survivor to a patient. The study will start in Guinea.
Porous borders Speaking on state television on Thursday, Malian Health Minister Ousmane Kone said the infected girl was being treated in the western town of Kayes.
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She was brought to a local hospital on Wednesday and her blood sample was Ebola-positive, Mr Kone said.
om Ebola should abstain from sex or use condoms for three months


The BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse travels with an ambulance worker in Liberia
The girl's mother died in Guinea a few weeks ago and the child was then brought by relatives to Mali, Reuters news agency quotes a health ministry official as saying.
Mali is now the sixth West African country to be affected by the latest Ebola outbreak - however Senegal and Nigeria have since been declared virus-free by the WHO.
With porous borders, countries neighbouring Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia are on high alert for possible imported cases of the virus, says BBC Africa health correspondent Anne Soy.
Separately, the World Health Organization (WHO) has already identified at least two experimental vaccines which it believes could be promising.

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