Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

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L.G. Morgan

Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

Post by L.G. Morgan » Thu Jul 10, 2014 2:00 am

Fear and ignorance as ebola 'out of control' in parts of west Africa


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Baffled white Medecins Sans Frontieres (Medicine without Borders, MSF) workers, attempting to contain an outbreak of the deadly Ebola disease, have been attacked by angry mobs of Africans in Guinea causing a clinic in that country to close down.


When ebola first struck Pujeh, a village deep in Sierra Leone’s forested interior region, residents did what they always do when a mysterious illness brings death: they consulted the traditional healer. But the elderly herbalist soon caught one of the world’s most contagious diseases, and then became a source for spreading it as visitors streamed in.

By the time officials had pinpointed Pujeh as a hotspot for the disease months later, dozens had died. “The people living in these areas said there’s no such thing as ebola,” said a district doctor who spoke on condition of anonymity. “They have their traditional beliefs and their traditional cures and they look up to their traditional leaders. Until we can bring the traditional leaders onside, it will be very difficult to convince them that ebola even exists.”

As the death toll from the latest outbreak of the world’s deadliest virus climbed to 518 – far exceeding the previous most lethal outbreak which killed 254 people in Congo – officials and health workers are battling a surge of infections propelled by misinformation and doubt about the disease’s existence on one side, and mistrust of scandal-hit governments on the other.

Following a Doctors Without Borders warning that the illness is “out of control” in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, west African health ministers on Wednesday began a two-day summit in Ghana’s capital of Accra to discuss ways to strengthen regional co-operation. The World Health Organisation has also warned four other west African countries – Ivory Coast, Senegal, Mali and Guinea Bissau – to prepare for the possible arrival of travellers carrying the virus.

Some government officials have disputed the WHO’s statement, saying the increasing death toll is a sign of better surveillance. “We are not saying everything is okay but there are fewer people dying in silence now, which is a good thing – the more we can identify when and where there are fatalities, the better we can prevent further cases,” health ministry official Sakouba Keita said from Guinea’s capital of Conakry.

The country has been the hardest hit by the virus, which first appeared there in February, before spreading through the tropical forests that sprawl into Liberia and Sierra Leone. More disturbingly, it has also jumped to all three countries’ densely-populated capitals.

“This is different from other cases just by the fact it’s a cross-border epidemic. Previous outbreaks have been very localised, which makes them easier to isolate and contain. Now for the first time, it’s also affecting urban areas,” said Dr Nestor Ndayimirije, Liberia’s WHO representative who has handled epidemics in several other countries.

Ebola was first identified in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sudan in 1976, which suffered simultaneous outbreaks of different strains miles apart.

It was named after Congo’s Ebola river, where its most lethal mutation – the Zaire strain – infected 318 people and killed 280.

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Ebola is believed to be hosted by the fruit bat, a delicacy in Guinea and Liberia

Described by virologists as a “molecular shark”, ebola is believed to be hosted by the fruit bat, a delicacy in Guinea and Liberia. The current strain is at least the fifth mutation since its discovery in 1976. Diagnosis is often complicated by the fact symptoms mirror those of malaria, common in the region, including fever, vomiting and diarrhoea. Victims sometimes have horrific internal and external bleeding and most die of shock or multiple organ failure, although chances of survival increase dramatically if adequate treatment is received early on. No cure exists for ebola but confirmed cases are first quarantined before undergoing intensive rehydration therapy. Due to its high contagion rate, medical workers should wear head-to-toe biohazard suits even when dealing with dead patients.
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Weak public health systems have also undermined attempts to halt the disease. Sierra Leone and Liberia are both recovering from decades of back-to-back civil wars, while half a century of dictatorship in Guinea ended in 2010.

Daily reports from Liberia’s ministry of health provide a glimpse of just how big the hurdles are. On the eve of the regional summit, two suspected cases from Voinjama had travelled to the capital Monrovia – but specimens hadn’t been collected because “the county laboratory supervisor could not be found,” internal notes said.

The report also warned of an acute shortage of thermometers among a team dispatched to trace those who might have been in contact with suspects. Many of them feared taking temperatures in case they were exposed to the disease or attacked by locals, it added.
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But an alarmingly wide spread is partly down to geography. “The deaths have been increasing because of traditional burial rites in that region,” said Tolbert Nyenswah, Liberia’s deputy chief medical officer. The Kissi ethnicity, found in all three countries, traditionally keep their dead at home for several days, and mourners touch the deceased’s head frequently before burial.

Ebola has a fatality rate of up to 90% and is transmitted through contact with fluids of infected people or animals, like urine, sweat, blood and saliva, even after death.

A doctor in Sierra Leone said patients’ families often attempted to break them out of treatment centres – often successfully. “Some of them are in denial and that it is something they can treat at home, and faith healers are one of the problems for us. When you have patients disappearing like that, you don’t know where the virus will appear next.”

When trader Fiya Lasana was diagnosed with suspected ebola in a clinic in Sierra Leone’s Kailahun district, he was put under quarantine. But convinced he had only malaria, he slipped out. Days later he returned, weak and dazed, for treatment. “My family tried prayers, but that didn’t work, so I returned,” said Lasana, who was declared ebola-free after eleven days.

Liberia’s president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, on Monday issued a warning on state radio that anyone suspected of holding ebola patients in homes or churches would be prosecuted.

The disease has also revealed alarming mistrust between citizens and public office holders in a region with shocking corruption levels.

Ebola was initially viewed as a government conspiracy to depopulate Sierra Leone’s Kailahun district, and fierce resistance to the arrival of health workers culminated in the stoning of a Doctors Without Borders vehicle. In Liberia, many remain adamant the outbreak is a hoax from government officials seeking to distract from a series of recent scandals, or for health officials to rake in public funds.

“I will say this loud, the government of Liberia has come up with a new strategy to divert the Liberian people’s mind,” student Alfred Randall said. “We understand the issue of ebola, ebola is real, we agree the virus is a very terrible virus, but ebola is not in Liberia,” he said.

Health workers at the frontline of the battle – often the first to die – face other challenges. Last week, riots broke out and an ambulance was attacked as family members fought to reclaim a victim’s corpse from a hospital in Kenema, Sierra Leone’s third largest city. On the same day, a three-man burial team was chased out of the Liberian town of Banjol where they went to bury a victim. “We need to find a special place to bury these corpses, if not, the bodies will keep piling up on us,” a member of the team said, adding that families often refused to come forward to identify dead relatives for fear of catching it.

Officials and several hundred researchers who have poured into all three countries have scrambled to disseminate public information, seen as key to containment.

But when the outbreak first began, popular text messages circulating in Guinea said an antidote could be found in a concoction of hot chocolate, coffee, milk, raw onions and sugar.

“Ebola, ebola, ebola. I hear it everywhere,” said Adama Sherry from behind her market stall in Sierra Leone’s Tombo, a fishing village as yet unaffected by the virus. Sherry admitted she couldn’t list the symptoms, causes or precautions.

Nearby, a local school had recently emptied out when word spread of routine blood tests being carried out – rumour had it that the needles would infect children with ebola.

Liberia’s health ministry has begun putting images of ebola-ravaged corpses in newspapers and on television. “They are very graphic but it is working – people are starting to see that ebola is not just a spiritual thing that you can cure through going to church,” Nyenswah, the deputy chief medical officer, said.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/j ... est-africa

Reinhard

Re: Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

Post by Reinhard » Thu Jul 10, 2014 2:17 am

Human tests of Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TKMR)’s treatment for Ebola, one of the world’s most lethal diseases, have been put on hold by U.S. regulators due to safety concerns.

The Food and Drug Administration has requested additional information to ensure the drug is safe at higher doses, the company said today in a statement. The therapy is in the first of three stages of clinical trials usually required by regulators for approval.

Tekmira will “continue our dialogue with the FDA, provided for under our fast-track status, in order to advance the development of this important therapeutic agent,” Tekmira’s Chief Executive Officer Mark Murray said in the statement. The company didn’t say how long the hold was expected to last, and spokeswoman Julie Rezler didn’t immediately respond to a phone call requesting comment.

Shares of the Vancouver-based drugmaker fell 16 percent to $11.63 at the close in New York, the biggest single-day decline since April 14.

The Ebola virus kills as many as 90 percent of those it strikes, and the latest outbreak in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone is the worst on record, resulting in more than 450 deaths. The World Health Organization has said the outbreak may last another three to four months.

Ebola Research

Despite the deadly nature of the disease, the relative rarity of outbreaks and their confinement to primarily rural areas of poor African nations make Ebola an unattractive target for big drugmakers.

Instead, much of the research in Ebola treatments has been funded by the U.S. government. Tekmira said its drug, an RNA-based therapy, is being developed under a $140 million contract with the U.S. Department of Defense.

Among the most promising experimental drugs are antibody cocktails. One is being developed at Canada’s National Microbiology Laboratory, though it needs more work before it can be tested in humans, according to Public Health Canada.

Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc., a closely held company in San Diego, is developing another, along with the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-07-0 ... s-fda.html

J.P. Smith

Re: Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

Post by J.P. Smith » Tue Aug 05, 2014 2:28 am

Ebola May be Present in More Animals than Previously Thought

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Ebola may be present in more animals than previously thought, according to researchers studying the virus. So far, it has been detected in chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, antelopes, porcupines, rodents, dogs, pigs and humans.

Humans and primates are particularly susceptible to the deadly disease, at least to certain strains. During the outbreak currently wreaking havoc in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, Ebola has killed 670 people thus far and infected more than 1,000.

"The close evolutionary relationship between humans, chimpanzees and gorillas makes their immune systems very similar," Peter Walsh, a primate expert at the University of Cambridge, told Discovery News.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), humans contract Ebola - formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever - via direct contact with the blood, body fluids and tissues of infected animals or people. During an outbreak like this most recent one, those at the highest risk of being infected are health workers, family members and others in close contact with sick people and deceased patients.

Eating or handling bush meats are also potential sources of Ebola, but experts are now focusing on fruit bats, which they believe harbor the illness. Ebola is fatal in up to 90 percent of humans who become infected, according to the WHO. Most of the infected bats appear to come from the following three species: Hypsignathus monstrosus, Epomops franqueti and Myonycteris torquata.

"In general, Ebola researchers think that the natural host of Ebola virus are fruit bats, and that the virus is transmitted to non-human primates and then to humans through the bush meat trade," Purdue University's David Sanders, one of the world's leading experts on zoonotic diseases, told Discovery News.

He added, "It is possible that there is direct transmission from fruit bats to humans."

In certain African cultures humans eat bat meat, but as for non-human primates, they might become infected by consuming the same fruit that bats eat.

Sanders and his team found that even the way Ebola infects human cells is nearly identical - both structurally and biochemically - to the way that similar viruses enter bird cells. This suggests that the proteins of the virus had a fairly recent ancestor.

"It is therefore possible that Ebola was at one time associated with a bird host and may even be so today," Sanders said, adding that the bird must be native to Central Africa, where Ebola was first discovered in 1976.

http://www.natureworldnews.com/home/new ... le_id=8335

Reinhard

Re: Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

Post by Reinhard » Tue Aug 05, 2014 2:34 am

African Villagers Won’t Give Up Their Bat & Bush Meat Despite Warnings

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Scientists report that Ebola may be present in more animals than previously thought. So far, it has been detected in chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, antelopes, porcupines, rodents, dogs, pigs and humans.

Eighty per cent of the meat eaten in Cameroon is killed in the wild and is known as “bushmeat”. (Gerald Direct)

Villagers in Africa are still eating bush meat.
All Africa reported:
  • Medical teams struggling to curb Ebola in West Africa have been discouraging bush meat consumption, believed to have caused the outbreak, but some rural communities dependent on the meat for protein are determined to continue their traditional hunting practices.

    While meat from wild animals such as fruit bats, rodents and forest antelopes have largely disappeared from market stalls in main towns like Guéckédou (in southern Guinea and the epicentre of the disease) or the capital Conakry following campaigns to avoid contamination, it is still being eaten in remote villages despite the risks.

    “Life is not easy here in the village. They [authorities and aid groups] want to ban our traditions that we have observed for generations. Animal husbandry is not widespread here because bush meat is easily available. Banning bush meat means a new way of life, which is unrealistic,” said Sâa Fela Léno, who lives in Nongoha village in Guéckédou.
The disease, which first erupted in Guinea’s southern Forest Region and diagnosed in March as Ebola, is West Africa’s first outbreak, and the worst known to date globally with more than 700 deaths. Infections continue to spread in Guinea and neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Poor knowledge and superstition especially in rural communities, as well as cross-border movement, a poor public health infrastructure and other epidemiological causes have contributed to its spread.

The black market demand for monkey meat could see Ebola spread in the UK and Europe.

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/08 ... -warnings/

Reinhard

Re: Chiroptophobia sets in as Ebola spirals out of control

Post by Reinhard » Sat Aug 09, 2014 4:38 am

Ebola sparks panic across Nigeria
as citizens scramble for salt-water bath “remedy”
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His Royal Majesty Idakwo Michael Ameh Oboni II


Faced with threat from a dreaded disease that has neither cure nor vaccine, panicking Nigerians are turning to salt water bath recommended by a Nigerian king.

by Ogala Emmanuel, Nnenna Ibeh and Ola' Audu

Nigerians are scrambling for salt-water bath for protection from the deadly Ebola virus after a call from the ruler of the Igala Kingdom, the Attah of Igala, prescribing salt solution as a magical vaccine against the virus went viral.
But the Nigerian government has issued a statement warning that bathing with salted water is not a cure for the deadly Ebola Virus.

Local radio and TV stations in Kogi state quoted the monarch, the Attah of Igala, Idakwo Michael Ameh Oboni, late Thursday, as making the prescriptions from his palace in Idah, the traditional capital of Igalaland.
Mr. Oboni offered the purported prescription after the Nigerian government declared that the pandemic had become a national emergency.

The prescription, originally intended for people of the Igala Kingdom, quickly went viral on social media and text messaging platforms.

Relatives also exchanged telephone calls advising one another to bath with salt-water solution.
The salt solution bath remedy was reinforced after claims that a Catholic priest, Ejike Mbaka, also asked his followers to perform some religious rituals which included drinking salt water.
Salt and water are the major ingredients of the Holy Water used for a wide range of physical and spiritual purpose by Catholics.

The Igala vaccine

The Igala king’s “magical prescription” was received with great enthusiasm by residents panicked by the spread of the virus around the West African subregion.
According to local report, the monarch prescribed that a pinch of salt be added to about 15 litres of water and used for a soapless bath.

One bath with the salt solution is all that is required, residents who admitted performing the ‘immunization’ ritual, told
“We have nothing to lose with a salt water bath,” Attanasius Ameh, a resident of Idah in Kogi state said, justifying the ritual.
He argued that faced with a no-vaccine-no-cure situation, a simple salt solution bath as a potential vaccine was a chance shot at survival many were willing to take.
“I have done it,” Juliet Gimba, a resident of Lokoja said. “I put a pinch of salt in a bucket full of water and had my bath without soap. I bathed all my children with it too. There is no cure for Ebola. This is the best I can do to protect my family.”

There is no medical proof that salt water solution could prevent the transmission of Ebola.
The king did not also explain how he came about the prescription.
Nonetheless, many Nigerians who spoke to PREMIUM TIMES admitted they’ve had the saline bath.
An Abuja resident, Patience Enang, 36, told PREMIUM TIMES that her husband, a soldier, had called her by 5am, Friday morning, from Kaduna, asking her to bath their three children with the solution. She did.

The Maiduguri salt rush

Residents of Maiduguri, capital city of Borno state, defiled the tense security situation in the state to join in the ritual bath frenzy after text messages were circulated late Thursday night.
Many cut short their sleeps to carry out the ritual.

In Maiduguri, the vaccination had a twist. It was to be performed within a given period.
“Ebola has finally entered Maiduguri! To prevent ebola sickness use hot water to bathe before 4am. Ebola is real!” the text message, which sent residents scampering for the bath late in the night, read.
Some residents, who did not have salt in their homes, had to go knocking on the doors of their neighbours around 3.00 am, just to beat the ‘deadline’.

A different version of the Maiduguri ritual bath included instructions to recite some verses of the Quran, drink part of the salted water before bathing with the rest.
All these were to be done before 4a.m.

Mystical lineage

The Attah of Igala, Idakwo Michael Ameh Oboni, is believed to have mystical powers, inherited from his father, Attah Ameh Oboni, who is regarded – in the kingdom – to be as powerful as some unknown gods.
The elder Attah Oboni is revered for his stiff resistance of Britain during the colonial era, and the Sultanate, which tried to annex Igalaland as part of the largely muslim Sokoto caliphate.
The late king’s subjects also have fond memories of his struggles in protecting the ancient traditions of the Igalas, as well as asserting himself, in the face of pressures to substitute his influence in Igala Kingdom with colonial rule.
He reportedly fought with magical powers.
He is believed to have committed suicide in 1957 after he got intelligence the British colonial government planned to depose and exile him.

The Igalas are the dominant tribe in Kogi state, North-central Nigeria, with a population of about two million.
Kogi state sits on the Nigerian map as the main land link between south-east and south-south part of Nigeria to the capital, Abuja, and the rest of northern Nigeria.
Ebola Virus, virulent killer
Ebola is currently ravaging the West African region, with Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea worst hit in the outbreak that started back in February.

Nigeria was dragged into the mess late July after Patrick Sawyer, an American-Liberian touched down in the Lagos international airport with a fully manifested Ebola Virus disease.
Ebola is highly contagious. It is transmitted via contact with body fluids such as blood, saliva, semen or body discharges of infected persons.

Nigeria’s health ministry says a Nigerian nurse in the Lagos hospital where Mr. sawyer was treated also died of the disease.
Six others, who had primary contact with Mr. Sawyer, have been confirmed positive with the virus.
Ebola is a highly fatal virus, killing up to nine of every 10 victims. There is no known cure or vaccine for the disease and it is unknown why those who survive it make it alive.

But two Americans are currently recovering from the disease after they were administered with a test serum.
Medical experts, who spoke to PREMIUM TIMES say a salt water bath is not harmful to human body when used moderately.
But they warned that Ebola is better warded off by following simple self hygiene rules like washing hands, avoiding infected victims or bodies and avoiding bush meats.

But the Nigerian government has issued a statement warning that bathing with salted baths is not a cure for the deadly Ebola Virus.

https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/166 ... 5BCj2.dpuf

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