Just
in case you missed the newsflash this week, the deadly Ebola virus, for
the first time, has found its way into West Africa, a region that
Nigeria is part of.
The outbreak, which began in Guinea’s
south eastern forest region last month, is causing widespread panic as
death toll rises and the outbreak continues to spread,
According to media reports, more than 125
cases have been documented across three countries — Guinea, Liberia and
Sierra Leone; and as of the last count, about 82 persons have lost
their lives to this tropical virus.
What Ebola is
The World Health Organisation describes
the Ebola Virus Disease as a viral haemorrhagic fever and one of the
most virulent viral diseases known to humankind.
Ebola is regarded in the medical world as
the deadliest virus on earth, not only because it has no known cure,
but also because it is one of the world’s lethal infections: it could
kill within hours or few days of symptoms, whether an infected person
gets treatment or not.
The viral disease, whose initial symptoms
can include sudden fever, intense weakness, muscle pain and sore
throat, can later progress to vomiting, diarrhoea and, in some cases,
internal and external bleeding. As scary as it is, the virus does not
respond to any vaccine.
The incubation period of the virus can
last from two days to three weeks, and diagnosis is difficult. The human
disease has so far been mostly limited to Africa, although one strain
has cropped up in the Philippines. The best treatment affected persons
get is therapy.
Though the Federal Government has said
there is no cause for alarm, since no case has been found in Nigeria so
far, there is the need for everyone to do what is necessary to prevent
getting infected.
Preventing infection
Reiterating the need for residents to
adopt urgent precautionary measures against the disease, the Lagos State
Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, urges members of the public to
observe and maintain high standards of personal and environmental
hygiene to prevent the outbreak of the highly infectious disease.
Idris notes that the main host of the
virus is relatively unknown; however, he says, there is enough
scientific evidence to show that Ebola virus can be contracted by
persons handling sick or dead infected wild animals, including
chimpanzees, gorillas, monkeys, forest antelope, and fruit bats.
He says, “Ebola virus can be spread
through close contact with the blood, body fluids, organs and tissues of
infected animals; direct contact with blood, organ or body secretions
of an infected person. The transmission of the virus by other animals
like monkey and chimpanzee cannot be ruled out.”
Idris states that those at the highest
risk of contracting the disease include health care workers who treat
patients without taking the right precautions to avoid infection; and
families or friends of an infected person who could be infected in the
course of feeding, holding and caring for the sick.
He notes that one could still contract
the virus from an infected person as long as their blood and secretions
contain the virus — in some cases, up to seven weeks after they have
recovered. Even those who come in contact with body fluids of a person
killed by this virus are not exempted!
Recognise the risk
He adds that though there is no specific
treatment for the disease, persons with symptoms — including bleeding
from the mouth, nose, rectum and ear; or those suffering from fever,
malaria and cholera — should report to health centres closest to them,
where they would be admitted for special care and treated in isolation.
Hunters and those who eat or handle game
meat of monkeys and chimpanzees are also at risk, experts say; that is
why the WHO warns against consuming raw bush meat and forbids any
contact with infected bats, monkeys and apes, saying that these game
meats were considered delicacies in the areas where the outbreak
started.
Counsel for health workers
The global body advises health workers to
be at alert; wear personal protective equipment, observe universal
basic precautions when attending to suspected or confirmed cases, and
report to the local health authorities immediately.
Other measures, which include washing of
hands often with soap and water, avoiding close contact with people who
are sick and ensuring that objects used by the sick are decontaminated
and properly disposed, are also meant to reduce the risk of infection.
PUNCHNG
My name is Adams Michell,am from liberia I am here to give my testimony about a doctor who cured me from Ebola virus.i went to many hospitals, churches for cure but there was no solution out, so I was thinking how can I get a solution out so that i cannot loose my life. One day I was in the river side thinking the next step to take if it is to jump into the river so that I can loose my life totally or just think where I can go to get solution. so a lady walk to me telling me why am I so sad and i open up all to him telling her my stories, she told me that she can help me by introducing me to a powerful man, she introduce me to a doctor who cast spells on people and gave me he number and email so i called him and also email him. He told me all the things I need to provide and also give me instructions to take, which I followed properly. Before I knew what is happening he called me and told me that am free from Ebola virus t thought he was not true until i went for text i found out that am free. so if you are also infected please email him at drakugbeherbalcentre@yandex.com and also contact him at +2348074839242
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