CDC: Ebola cases could reach at least 550,000 by January
posted by harcknzy on september 24,2014- NEW: CDC: Ebola cases in Liberia and Sierra Leone could rise to 550,000 by January
- WHO: Death toll from Ebola passed 2,800 as of Monday, with 5,800-plus cases reported
- Fatality rate is 71% and "current epidemiologic outlook is bleak," WHO experts say
- Nigeria and Senegal have shown Ebola can be contained with rigorous efforts, it says
The range of estimated
cases -- from 550,000 to 1.4 million -- is wide because experts suspect
the current count is highly under-reported. The official death toll from
Ebola in West Africa has climbed to more than 2,800 in six months, with
5,800 cases confirmed as of Monday, the World Health Organization said.
But the CDC estimates
that if 70% of people with Ebola are properly cared for in medical
facilities, the epidemic could decrease and eventually end.
In a press conference Tuesday, CDC Director Tom Frieden cautioned
that this model is based on older data from August. The numbers are not
projections, but "scenarios." The model does not take into account
President Obama's announcement that the U.S. is sending troops and extra
medical equipment to the area. Nor does it take into account the
additional help from other countries promised.
What the model does
suggests, he said, is that the current surge of help can "break the back
of the epidemic" and is "exactly what's needed" to end it. He said he
is now "confident the most dire predictions will not come to pass."
The cautionary tale this data does tell, he said is that there would be an "enormous cost" if help is delayed.
Gayle Smith,
a special assistant to the President and senior director of the
National Security Council said the model tells responders how to "bend
the curve" and that the epidemic can end with a large international
response. "The momentum must at least be maintained to ensure we are way
out ahead of this," Smith said. And added that the international help
will need to "stay on this as long as it takes."
A separate nine-month assessment published by WHO experts in The New England Journal of Medicine on Tuesday says the fatality rate of this outbreak in West Africa is 71% and that the "current epidemiologic outlook is bleak."
It also warns that
without "drastic improvements" in measures to control its spread, the
number of cases and deaths from Ebola is expected to continue climbing
from hundreds to thousands per week in the coming months. The cumulative
number of cases could exceed 20,000 by November 2, the assessment said.
It blamed the spread not
on a particularly virulent strain of the virus, rather it said this
outbreak was so deadly because of a "combination of dysfunctional health
systems, international indifference, high population mobility, local
customs, densely populated capitals, and lack of trust in authorities
after years of armed conflict."
"Perhaps most important,
Ebola has reached the point where it could establish itself as an
endemic infection because of a highly inadequate and late global
response."
It warns that the global response must improve to meet the threat posed by this and future epidemics.
Another six-month report
from WHO -- which assesses the situation in three countries at the
outbreak's center, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone -- is dedicated to
those health workers "who, as an expression of our innately shared human
compassion, risked their lives, and lost them."
In the six months since
this outbreak was first formally reported in March, 337 health care
workers have been infected, of whom more than 181 have died, the WHO
said.
Complete coverage of the Ebola outbreak
Guinea: Porous borders aid spread
The WHO's six-month report on Guinea,
where the outbreak began in a remote area, details how the virus first
gained a grip on a vulnerable, frightened population ill-equipped to
deal with the deadly disease.
Once Ebola was
identified as the killer, a national and international response swung
into gear. But each time it looked like the country might be at the
point of controlling the virus, new flare-ups occurred.
The WHO report concludes
Ebola kept getting reintroduced "into Guinea -- with its notoriously
porous borders -- from the large outbreaks in neighboring Liberia and
Sierra Leone."
Read: Deadliest outbreak: What you need to know
Controlling the virus then will not be feasible in Guinea until its stopped in neighboring countries.
Meanwhile, health workers there have come under attack as they seek to educate the local population.
"Today, one of the
biggest barriers to control is violence from an impoverished, terrified
and shattered population that does not understand what hit it and fights
back the only way it can," the report said.
Liberia: Misery and hope
WHO's six-month report on Liberia summarizes their situation as one of "misery and despair tempered by some good reasons for hope."
The number of Liberian
cases is increasing exponentially, with 113 new ones reported over a
single 24-hour period on one day last week, WHO said -- a record number
in any outbreak. At the same time, treatment centers are overflowing.
Many patients are turned away.
Read: Desperation grows in the Ebola zone
The capacity to deliver
other basic health services, such as care for women in childbirth, has
been compromised. The report warns malaria-related deaths may soon
surpass those from Ebola.
Hope can be found in the
opening of a new WHO-funded, 120-bed Ebola treatment center, it said.
The U.S. government is also setting up a new laboratory to speed up
diagnosis. Currently there are four major Ebola treatment units in
Liberia.
In remarks made on
Tuesday, Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said that her
country's health care system is hurting. Of the over 1500 who have died,
85 were health care workers.
The President
characterized the CDC's model for possible infections as "scary to all
of us." She added, though, that she is happy with the U.S. response to
the disaster. She believes it will make a "major" difference.
She predicts with that increased international effort, Liberia will see better results in a couple of weeks.
Sierra Leone: Urgent needs
The situation assessment for Sierra Leone
explains how traditional burial practices helped the virus spread
quickly there following the funeral of a respected local healer.
The virus has taken a devastating toll on health workers and researchers.
"Sierra Leone's most
urgent needs include more treatment beds in much safer facilities,
better contact training and follow-up, more personal protective
equipment and body bags, and more properly protected teams to collect
bodies and bury them safely," WHO said.
The deployment of international medical teams in West Africa, including from China and Cuba, may help.
Nigeria and Senegal, where the situation is judged "stable -- for the moment," are seen as success stories.
Those countries have
shown conventional methods such as early detection, contact tracing,
isolation and an adequate supply of personal protective equipment can
contain the virus, WHO said.
"If Nigeria can control
an outbreak caused by such a deadly and highly contagious virus, right
from the start, any country in the world can do the same," its report
said
0 Comments: