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NADMO tackles Ebola

Tue, 4 Nov 2014 Source: iddrissu a. jara (the al-hajj)

As they embark on mass education in communities

The East Ayawaso District office of the National Disaster Management Organization (NADMA) in the Greater Accra Region has joined hands to step up campaign against the deadly Ebola virus.


The outreach was part of its programs to sensitize members of communities on how to prevent disaster and outbreaks throughout its jurisdictions.


The East Ayawaso District coordinator of NADMO, Hon. Alhaji Hameed Babar explained that the exercise comes on the heels of numerous ebola cases reported in the neighboring countries, and that Ghana has the role to signal her people on how to prevent such outbreaks.


The NADMO boss made this observation during a community door-door prevention education last week at Accra Newtown, a suburb in the Greater Accra Region.


Oxford University in United Kingdom has predicted that Ghana and 14 other countries in Africa are at risk of animal-to-human transmission of Ebola by virtue of their geography.


The countries are: Nigeria, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Angola, Togo, United Republic of Tanzania, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Madagascar and Malawi.

The University made the revelation in a model published in the journal eLife which takes a look at the most likely explanation — that Ebola’s animal reservoir, fruit bats, could spread the disease in the animal kingdom and to humans through the dense forest that spans 22 countries.


“Our map shows the likely ‘reservoir’ of Ebola virus in animal populations, and this is larger than has been previously appreciated,” said the study’s author Nick Golding, a researcher at Oxford University’s Department of Zoology. “This does not mean that transmission to humans is inevitable in these areas; only that all the environmental and epidemiological conditions suitable for an outbreak occur there.


Until this year’s epidemic, Ebola did not exist in West Africa. Now with nearly 2,300 people dead from the virus, mostly in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, scientists still don’t fully understand how Ebola arrived from Central Africa, where outbreaks of this strain of the virus had occurred in the past.


Several species of fruit bats are suspected — though not confirmed — to carry Ebola without showing symptoms.


Unlike humans and other animals who are likely to die from an Ebola infection, bats can carry the disease and infect other bats and animals, such as monkeys and rodents through migratory activities.


Bats along with other animals, such as monkeys, are also one form of “bush meat” consumed in some African countries where there have been reports of Ebola outbreaks.

And though consuming cooked bush meat is unlikely to spread the virus, hunting or preparing raw meat for consumption increases the likelihood that an infection might occur.


According to the Oxford model, in addition to the seven countries who have reported Ebola outbreaks in this epidemic and in past outbreaks since the disease was identified 1976, 15 other countries are at risk.


There are five known strains of Ebola, and the one currently causing the West African outbreak, Zaire, is the most virulent.


The other strains, Sudan, Taï Forest and Bundibugyo, have caused contained outbreaks in Ivory Coast, Sudan, and Uganda in the past. And the Reston species has not caused any known outbreaks, according to the World Health Organization.

Source: iddrissu a. jara (the al-hajj)
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