Many cases of this deadly diseases "Ebola" in Africa has taken its next move into Sierra Leone, Sierra
Leone may be going undetected, grassroots doctors warned in The Lancet as they highlighted the impoverished country's problems in
combating the virus.
The journal
published the letter on the heels of ministerial talks in Ghana, where a
senior UN health official on Thursday said the outbreak in West Africa,
the worst in the history of Ebola, may persist for several more months if not years.
Sierra
Leone, one of the poorest countries in Africa and in the world, suffers a chronic
lack of doctors, diagnostic tools, a disease-monitoring network and even
clothing to protect health workers, the letter said.
"Many
cases meeting the case definition for suspected Ebola might be going
undetected and unreported because ill people and their families are
opting for self-treatment with over-the-counter drugs or traditional
medicine," it said.
"At
present, there is little incentive for patients to seek professional
diagnosis of suspected Ebola. Laboratory testing can be expensive
(especially when a panel of tests is required for differential
diagnosis), is unlikely to change the course of treatment, and might
stigmatise an infected patient and their family."
It
added: "Even if a patient wanted to be tested for Ebola, few (if any)
laboratories in the region have the capacity to safely test a biosafety
level 4 pathogen."
The warning
came from four doctors working at the Mercy Hospital Research
Laboratory in the city of Bo. The letter is headed by an American-based
specialist, Karen Jacobsen at George Mason University in Fairfax,
Virginia.
Bo has fewer than 15
doctors for a population of more than 150,000, a situation that is
common across Sierra Leone as well as in Guinea and Liberia, the other
countries where the epidemic is unfolding, the letter said.
"There
is an urgent need to provide reliable and constant access to personal
protective equipment in health-care centres across the region," it
added.
The letter observed
that early attempts to impose controls against the disease, by
restrictions of border crossings and of sales of bushmeat had not worked
-- and indeed may have backfired.
“What
is certain is that these policies (and the ways that they were
communicated) raised anxiety and, in some places, fuelled rumours that
led to counter-productive behaviours."
The
World Health Organization (WHO) gives a toll of 467 fatalities from
Ebola, a total comprising confirmed or suspected cases. Ninety-nine have
occurred in Sierra Leone.
Keiji
Fukuda, the UN agency's assistant director-general of health security,
said at the close of the 12-nation conference in Accra on Thursday it
was "impossible to give a clear answer" on how far the epidemic could
spread or when it might begin to retreat.
"I
certainly expect that we are going to be dealing with this outbreak
minimum for a few months to several months," he told AFP. "I really hope
for us to see a turnaround where we begin to see a decrease in cases in
the next several weeks."
Source: http://news.yahoo.com
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