Sierra Leone’s Ebola shutdown uncovers 92 dead in capital, 56 new cases reported

Burial
September 2014 FREETOWN, Africa – Sierra Leone wrapped up its 72-hour shutdown on Sunday, with authorities reporting that the action aimed at containing the Ebola epidemic had uncovered up to 70 dead bodies in and around the capital. Most of the West African country’s six million people were confined to their homes for a third straight day, with only essential workers such as health professionals and security forces exempt. Almost 30,000 volunteers have been going door-to-door to educate locals and hand out soap, in an exercise that was expected to lead to scores more patients and bodies being discovered in homes. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Sarian Kamara revealed that the authorities had received thousands of calls but only a handful of new patients in the Western Area covering Freetown and its surroundings. “We were… able to confirm new cases which, had they not been discovered, would have greatly increased transmission,” she said. “Up to this morning, we had 22 new cases. The response from the medical (teams) has improved and the burial teams were able to bury between 60 to 70 corpses over the past two days.” Independent observers have voiced concerns over the quality of advice being given out, deeming the shutdown a “mixed success” and complaining about the poor training of the door-to-door education teams. Meanwhile aid organizations and medical experts have questioned the feasibility of reaching 1.5 million homes in three days and have argued that confining people to their homes could erode trust between the government and the people.
Joe Amon, health and human rights director at New York-based advocacy organization Human Rights Watch, described the shutdown as “more of a publicity stunt than a health intervention.” Kamara said however that the shutdown was “on track” in its objective to get information to the entire population on how to prevent Ebola spreading. “There has been a total compliance to the order for people to stay at home… which made it possible for campaign teams throughout the country to reach families in their own homes to sensitize them about Ebola,” she said. Ebola fever can fell its victims within days, causing severe muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea and — in some cases — unstoppable internal and external bleeding. The outbreak has killed more than 2,600 people in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone this year, cutting a swathe through entire villages at the epicenter and prompting warnings over possible economic catastrophe. The widespread fallout from the outbreak was underlined by India’s decision Saturday to postpone plans for a summit in New Delhi to be attended by representatives of more than 50 African nations. The spread of the virus made it “logistically difficult given the public health guidelines to manage” the Third India-Africa Forum Summit, a foreign ministry official said. In Madrid, officials said a plane was being dispatched to fly a Catholic missionary infected with Ebola home from Sierra Leone.
Brother Manuel Garcia Viejo, 69, director of a hospital in the Sierra Leonean town of Lunsar, is the second Spaniard to contract the virus in the current epidemic. In Liberia, the hardest-hit country with more than 1,450 dead, health officials said action to halt the spread of the disease was being hampered by traditional communities still ignoring advice on staying away from highly infectious dead bodies. “Some people are still in denial. Because of that they are not listening to the rules,” said Gabriel Gorbee Logan  a health officer in Bomi County, northwest of the capital Monrovia. –AO
Ninety-two bodies and 56 new cases of the Ebola virus have been found in Sierra Leone as the three-day lockdown, imposed by the country’s government on September 19 comes to an end, Sky News reported Sunday, citing official reports. “There is a very strong possibility it [the lockdown] will be extended,” Stephen Gaojia, head of the Emergency Operations Center, was quoted by Sky News as saying. According to Sky News, an overall number of 123 people referred to the medical services during the government-imposed stay of which 56 tested positive for the virus. –RIA
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6 Responses to Sierra Leone’s Ebola shutdown uncovers 92 dead in capital, 56 new cases reported

  1. John says:

    I don’t think that the authorities in these African countries are going to intimidate, bully, or micro manage this population of Africans, because these people are just programmed to travel at will, and do their own thing. They have already killed health care workers who to them were interfering with their way of life. But, the bottom line is that if you cannot control the population, then you cannot contain the ebola virus. They found 70 dead bodies just laying out in the streets. When major population areas start having dead bodies laying around in the streets, then you have an area that has become endemic and the virus will spread like a wild fire.

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  2. It looks like India made the right decision. If Ebola got turned loose in such a densely populated nation, the death toll could be catastrophic.

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  3. vinny says:

    To me none of this makes sense what they are doing jn Sierra Leone, I understand they are desparate for action and fearful but locking down 6 million people for three days is amazing foolish to me. Heres why as I see it: They have now discovered 92 more dead and at leadt 56 more infected, I can bet that that number is much higher perhaps both numbers. Not knowing who was jnfected and locking down the e tire country for three days then giving the OK to leave their homes is amazing to me. This disease as an incubation period of up to 21 days, now how many are infected that weren’t before, this will get ugly really quick. If I’m wrong or not considering something please post so we can understand if this was a better decision than it appears.

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  4. Yellow Bird says:

    some helpful links i just found for use in event tracking…

    an interactive map:
    http://healthmap.org/ebola/

    comprehensive africa newssource:
    allafrica.com

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  5. aaronwt says:

    Either way the numbers are still very small. A few thousand. If it gets to the millions then I will start to get worried. But tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands is really not alot compared to the total population or death tolls from diseases in the past.

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    • Yellow Bird says:

      by the time it gets to the millions it will be too late to bother with getting worried…

      the problem with viewing history from the perspective of end results is that all the beginnings & most of the middle parts are missed

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