Three people die of Ebola and five others test positive in Guinea

Three people die of Ebola and five others test positive as Guinea reports its first cases of the disease since 2016

  • Three people have died of Ebola, and five have tested positive for virus in Guinea
  • Patients fell ill with diarrhoea, vomiting and bleeding after attending a burial  
  • Five living patients have been isolated in treatment centres, the state said today

Three people have died of Ebola, and another five have tested positive for the virus in southeastern Guinea, the state health agency said.  

It is the first possible resurgence of the disease in the West African country since the world’s worst outbreak between 2013 and 2016.

The patients fell ill with diarrhoea, vomiting and bleeding after attending a burial in Goueke sub-prefecture.

The five still alive have been isolated in treatment centres, the agency ANSS said today.

A member of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) putting on protective gear at the isolation ward of the Donka Hospital in Conakry, Guinea, West Africa, during the outbreak in 2014

It was not clear if the person buried on February 1 – a nurse at the local health centre who had fallen ill – had also died of Ebola.

The last major outbreak of Ebola in West Africa started in Guinea. It went on to kill at least 11,300 people with the vast majority of cases in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

A second round of tests is being carried out to confirm the latest Ebola diagnosis and health workers are working to trace and isolate the contacts of the cases, ANSS said.

It said Guinea would contact the World Health Organization (WHO) and other international health agencies to acquire Ebola vaccines. The vaccines have greatly improved survival rates in recent years.

A girl suspected of being infected with the Ebola virus having her temperature checked at the government hospital in Kenema, Sierra Leone, in August 2014

Liberians wash their hands next to an Ebola information and sanitation station, raising awareness about the virus in Monrovia, September 2014

‘WHO is ramping up readiness & response efforts to this potential resurgence of #Ebola in West Africa, a region which suffered so much from Ebola in 2014,’ the agency’s Regional Director for Africa Matshidiso Moeti said on Twitter.

The vaccines and improved treatments helped efforts to end the second-largest Ebola outbreak on record, which was declared over in Democratic Republic of Congo last June after nearly two years and more than 2,200 deaths.

Congo reported three new Ebola cases this month in one of the epicentres of that epidemic in eastern North Kivu province.

The Ebola virus causes severe vomiting and diarrhoea and is spread through contact with body fluids. It has a much higher death rate than COVID-19, but unlike coronavirus it is not transmitted by asymptomatic carriers.

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