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Second doctor dies of Ebola in Mali

The Associated Press | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 2 months AGO
by The Associated Press
| November 20, 2014 7:00 PM

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) — Mali’s emerging Ebola crisis deepened Thursday as the government announced that a doctor had died from the disease, becoming the second health worker fatality linked to a single patient initially thought to have kidney disease.

At least five people now have died from Ebola after coming into contact with a 70-year-old grand imam, who was brought to the Malian capital of Bamako from Guinea, the bordering country where the regional Ebola epidemic first began.

The death of a 25-year-old male nurse at Clinique Pasteur who treated the imam first prompted health authorities to review past patients. The imam’s family members who had brought him to Bamako all were later admitted to an Ebola clinic back in Guinea upon their return.

Malian authorities are now following more than 300 people, including those who helped prepare the imam’s body for burial after he succumbed to the disease.

Health workers have been particularly vulnerable to contracting Ebola because of their close contact with the sick, who spread the virus through bodily fluids such as blood, urine and feces. On Thursday, a Cuban doctor who had contracted the virus in Sierra Leone was flown out of the country en route to treatment in Switzerland.

Despite some improvements in Liberia and Guinea, the World Health Organization said Wednesday that the spread of Ebola remains “intense” in most of Sierra Leone. Some 168 new confirmed cases emerged in a single week in Sierra Leone’s capital of Freetown recently, according to a WHO report.

“The numbers are still rising and the transmission is persistent and widespread,” said Amadu Kamara, the U.N.’s Ebola crisis manager in Sierra Leone. “Rapid and coordinated response are needed to overcome the spread of the Ebola disease.”

The WHO report released late Wednesday indicated that Sierra Leone had the lowest percentage of Ebola patients who had been isolated — only 13 percent. By comparison, that figure was 72 percent in Guinea.

 

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