The UN launched a mission Thursday to prevent the global spread of Ebola, describing the epidemic as the world's "highest priority" as the US scrambled to limit its own outbreak to one patient. Anthony Banbury, head of the UN Mission on Ebola Emergency Response (UNMEER), began a tour of the three hardest-hit nations in the Liberian capital Monrovia setting out an ambitious goal to eradicate the deadly virus.
"The only way we will end this crisis is if we end every single last case of Ebola so there is no more risk of transmission to anyone, and when that's accomplished, UNMEER will go home," he said. The agency will work on health and education, Banbury said. But it will also make more vehicles available in the response and helping Ebola-free neighbouring countries defend themselves against a possible spread.
"The sooner UNMEER can end, the better for all of us. It's my hope that it will be as soon as possible because that means fewer lives will be lost," he told reporters. President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf had told Banbury on his arrival in Liberia, the worst-hit nation with almost two-thirds of the 3,338 deaths in west Africa, that the virus had spread to all 15 of its counties.
The UN envoy said he was intent on contributing to "the highest priority for the international community - for the whole world, not just the United Nations". On Friday, he is to move on to Sierra Leone and then Guinea on Sunday. US health officials, meanwhile, were scouring the Dallas area for people who came in contact with a Liberian man diagnosed with Ebola.
The man - the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola on US soil - flew from Liberia and arrived in Texas September 20 to visit family. He fell ill on September 24, reportedly after helping a pregnant woman in Liberia who later died of Ebola. He is in serious but stable condition.
Ebola is spread through close contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person, and can only be transmitted when a patient is showing symptoms such as fever, aches, bleeding, vomiting or diarrhoea. Health officials said they were monitoring 100 people for signs of Ebola and ordered four of the man's "close family members" to stay at home.
The Liberian government expressed "regret" on Thursday over the spread of Ebola from Monrovia to the US, adding that the incident had demonstrated "the clear international dimension of this Ebola crisis". The incubation period for Ebola is between two and 21 days. Patients are not contagious until they start to have symptoms. But once the disease takes hold, the disease can lead to massive bleeding and fatal organ failure.
The World Health Organisation said in its latest situation update there was still a "significant shortfall" in capacity in west Africa, with 1,500 more beds needed in Liberia and 450 in Sierra Leone. Around 160 health professionals pledged by Cuba to Sierra Leone arrived Thursday, reported an AFP correspondent at the airport near Freetown. Meanwhile Doctors Without Borders, the global aid agency leading the response in west Africa, with 3,000 staff including some 250 Western volunteers, has criticised the inadequacy of international aid, saying it desperately needs medical teams rather than cash.
Britain asked for foreign help to battle Ebola in Sierra Leone, a former colony, on Thursday at a London conference gathering ministers, diplomats and health officials from around 20 countries and world organisations. Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma, whose country has seen more than 600 deaths, had been due to attend but his plane broke down.
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