The WHO on Monday warned that Liberia is set to see a huge spike in infections from the Ebola epidemic ravaging west Africa, with thousands of new cases imminent.
The UN agency said the country, worst-hit in the outbreak with almost 1,100 deaths, faced “many thousands” of new infections in the next three weeks.
“WHO and its director-general will continue to advocate for more Ebola treatment beds in Liberia and elsewhere, and will hold the world accountable for responding to this dire emergency with its unprecedented dimensions of human suffering,” it said in a statement.
Photo: AFP
The deadliest Ebola epidemic the world has ever seen is spreading across west Africa, with Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone the worst affected.
The death toll has topped 2,000, out of nearly 4,000 people infected.
Key development partners trying to help Liberia respond to the outbreak “need to prepare to scale up their current efforts by three to four-fold,” the WHO said.
The countries bearing the brunt of the epidemic are among the world’s poorest, with dilapidated medical infrastructures buckling under the strain.
Before the outbreak, Liberia had only one doctor to treat every 100,000 patients in a total population of 4.4 million people.
Now that 152 healthcare workers in the country have been infected and 79 have died, the WHO said the ratio had worsened significantly.
“Every infection or death of a doctor or nurse depletes response capacity significantly,” it said.
The WHO on Monday said that one of its doctors in Sierra Leone had contracted the disease and would be evacuated.
The doctor, whose nationality was not given, is the second WHO staffer to be infected in the country.
They were working at the Ebola treatment center in Kenema, whose head doctor — and the country’s only virologist — died from the virus in July.
Britain said it would open a new 62-bed center outside Freetown in Sierra Leone within eight weeks. It will have 12 beds dedicated for local and international medical volunteers.
The WHO described how taxis filled with entire families, including members suspected of having Ebola, criss-crossed the Liberian capital, Monrovia, “searching for a treatment bed.”
“There are none. As WHO staff in Liberia confirm, no free beds for Ebola treatment exist anywhere in the country,” it said.
When Ebola patients are turned away from treatment centers, “they have no choice but to return to their communities and homes, where they inevitably infect others, perpetuating constantly higher flare-ups in the number of cases,” it said.
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