WHO COORDINATES INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE TO
OUTBREAK OF EBOLA IN GABON
A team of scientists from the World
Health Organization (WHO) and its partners in the Global Outbreak
Alert and Response Network has arrived in Gabon to help coordinate the
international response to an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in
the Ogooue-Ivindo Province in the north-eastern part of the country.
Laboratory testing carried out at the
Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville (CIRMF)
in Gabon indicates that the cause of the haemorrhagic fever outbreak
is the Ebola virus. For Gabon, this is the fourth Ebola outbreak since
1994. All outbreaks have been in the central and northeastern regions
of the country.
As of 12 December 2001, WHO has
received reports of 10 deaths from haemorrhagic fever among a total of
12 suspected cases.
The Gabon Ministry of Health has
established a national task force for managing the response to the
epidemic. WHO is supporting the Ministry of Health and this Task Force
in disease containment by:
- coordinating the international
response to the outbreak,
- implementing disease control
measures, such as barrier nursing procedures, finding
cases, tracing contacts and monitoring them, and supplying
protective equipment.
Dr Ray Arthur, an expert virologist,
and a team of three colleagues from WHO headquarters in Geneva, Dr
Adamou Yada from the WHO African Regional Office, together with Dr
Herve Zeller from Institute Pasteur in Paris, France, have arrived in
Gabon. Other partners in the Global Outbreak Alert and Response
Network are expected to arrive soon in Gabon.
"WHO and its partners will work
with the Gabonese authorities to contain the disease and to prevent
any potential spread in local communities. It is very important that
there is an effective and coordinated international response to this
outbreak," said Dr Mike Ryan, Coordinator of Global Alert and
Response at WHO headquarters.
Ebola haemorrhagic fever is one of the
most virulent viral diseases known to humankind, causing death in
50-90% of cases. The Ebola virus is transmitted by direct contact with
the blood or body fluids of infected persons or primates. The Ebola
virus was first identified in 1976 in the western equatorial province
of Sudan and in the nearby region of Yambuku, northern Democratic
Republic of the Congo, (then Zaire.)
Gabon’s first verified Ebola outbreak
occurred in December 1994 in gold mining encampments. Investigators
studying the outbreak were told of unexplained deaths of great apes,
gorillas and chimpanzees, but no dead animals were found. The outbreak
ended six weeks later.
Two other Ebola epidemics were
confirmed in the spring and fall of 1996. In early February, about 40
km south (seven hours by boat) from the 1994 outbreak, 13 people
became ill after butchering a dead chimpanzee they had found. In
October of that year, another Ebola epidemic was confirmed in the same
general region.
For further information, journalists can contact Mr
Gregory Hartl, WHO Spokesperson, WHO, Geneva. Telephone (+41 22) 791
4458; Fax (+41 22) 791 4858; Email: hartlg@who.int
All WHO Press Releases, Fact Sheets and Features as well as other
information on this subject can be obtained on Internet on the WHO
home page http://www.who.int/
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