While Ebola’s outbreak kills 16 people in the Congo, who says Trump says

While Ebola’s outbreak kills 16 people in the Congo, who says Trump says

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While Ebola’s outbreak kills 16 people in the Congo, who says Trump says

Sarah Carter is an award -producing News themezone producer based in Johannesburg, South Africa. She has been with News themezone since 1997, after an independent work for organizations such as the New York Times, National Geographic, PBS Frontline and NPR.

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The former USAID officer alarm about Ebola’s risk

While Ebola's outbreak kills 16 people in the Congo, who says Trump says

Usaid’s cuts in Uganda could increase Ebola’s risk worldwide, the former officer warns 03:39

Johannesburg – The Minister of Health of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Samuel Roger Kamba, confirmed last week an outbreak of the highly infectious Zaire strain of Ebola virus disease in the central province of Kasai in the country. He said that 16 deaths and 28 suspicious cases had been confirmed, including four suspicions of infections among health workers.

The regional director of the World Health Organization for Africa Mohamed Janabi said that the first case, known as the case of the index, was a “34 -year -old pregnant woman who was admitted on August 20 and died on August 25 with typical features of hemorrhagic fever; bloody diarrhea, nose bleeding, vomiting and bleeding of the line.”

The Ebola virus is transmitted to humans through close contact with infected wildlife, often bats, and can then spread through body fluids through a close contact from human to human. The WHO said that, as of September 4, the mortality rate of the case at the Congo outbreak was 57%, with 80% of cases in people 15 years or more.

This is the sixth Ebola outbreak within seven years in the Congo, which makes it the largest concentration of outbreaks since the virus was first discovered in 1976.

A team of lifeguards arrived on Sunday in the Health Zone of Bulape, where he has hit the outbreak, with medical supplies.

File photo: Congolese volunteer Ferdinand Tangenyi shows a Flip book that uses to inform people about the Ebola virus, in rubber
The Congolese volunteer Ferdinand Tangenyi shows a Flip book that uses to inform people about the Ebola virus, in rubber, democratic republic of the Congo, in a file photo of August 3, 2019. Baz Ratner/Reuters

In the capital of the country, Kinshasa, health workers and the first to respond to the Ministry of Health, WHO and the Centers for the control and prevention of WHO and Africa diseases received vaccines before implementations in the affected region.

The Congo currently has an arsenal of 2,000 doses of vaccine and has ordered that it arrive more in the next few days, according to WHO.

Patrick Otim, WHO’s emergency response coordinator for the area, told reporters during an informative session of September 4 that the United Nations Agency was already working to track close contacts with known cases, increase the capacity of field laboratory tests and the community’s response to guarantee early reports.

He acknowledged that the RDC had requested additional vaccines and emphasized that “early support attention is key to saving lives,” WHO was working to deliver more medical supplies, including protective clothing and other items “necessary to administer the outbreak.”

The last two outbreaks, in 2022, contained quickly, Otim said, but said they were addressed before the Trump administration severely reduced funds for international health programs, including WHO.

DRC -bola
A photo taken on March 21, 2021 shows a medical worker who vaccinated a local resident against the Ebola virus in the northern province of Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Alain Uaykani/Xinhua/Getty

Those cuts have concerned concern in Africa and other places On the ability of individual nations and global agencies to respond and contain disease outbreaks, including Ebola, and to prevent such mortal viruses from reaching the US coast.

“Recent cuts will definitely have an impact,” Otim said in the informative session. “As a global community, we need to work together to stop this virus, since diseases do not respect borders.”

“What we know (from the previous shoots) is that it needs to obtain supplies and resources as soon as possible to stop transmission,” Otim added.

President Trump announced in January That the United States, for a long time, a key interested part and the greatest donor of the agency, would withdraw from WHO, with the White House citing “the mishandling of the organization on the Covid-19 pandemic that emerged from Wuhan, China and other global health crises, its inability to adopt urgency reforms and its inability to demonstrate the independence of the political influence of the WHO of the WHO of WHO.

The Trump administration, at that time, also accused the WHO of demanding “unjustly onerous payments of the United States, very disproportionate with the payments evaluated from other countries.”

WHO almost noticed that, given the uncertainty about the future financing of the United States, I was reducing spending in ways that could affect their operations.

Congo’s medical care system was already overloaded as in battles to contain a mpox outbreakwith approximately 130,000 suspicious cases since last year and about 2,000 deaths now registered, WHO said in the informative session last week.

To complicate the answer is the fact that the medical insulation unit closest to the outbreak only has 15 beds, and access to the road from Kinshasa can take up to three days, further delaying the arrival of medical equipment and supplies.

WHO has already delivered about 13 tons of emergency medical supplies to Congo to help contain and treat the outbreak.

Other African nations have put border entrance points and health facilities on maximum alert to detect any possible case of Ebola.

  • Ebola
  • Congo Democratic Republic
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Africa
  • Donald Trump
  • World Health Organization

Sarah Carter

Sarah Carter is an award -producing News themezone producer based in Johannesburg, South Africa. She has been with News themezone since 1997, after an independent work for organizations such as the New York Times, National Geographic, PBS Frontline and NPR.

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