Showing posts with label Ariwara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ariwara. Show all posts

Thursday, September 05, 2019

S. Sudan: On alert for Ebola virus

Article from Voice of America News.com
By DIMO SILVA AURELIO 
Date: 4 July 2019
South Sudan on High Alert for Ebola Virus

JUBA , SOUTH SUDAN - South Sudan’s health officials are ramping up efforts to prevent the deadly Ebola virus from entering the country following a confirmed case some 70 kilometers from the border, in the northern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Dr. Pinyi Nyimol, South Sudan's director general for disease control and emergency response services, said the health ministry has sent seven personnel to the Yei River state, which borders Congo. "The aim is to strengthen the surveillance and preparedness for Ebola,” Nyimol told VOA's South Sudan in Focus.

“We are more worried because it is coming nearer because people are moving, so anybody, a contact can cross to South Sudan and the only thing we can do is to enhance our surveillance and screening and also to alert our health care workers about this and anybody coming, they have to start with traveling history and ask whether this person has been in DRC or not,” Nyimol said.
Photo: Ebola case reported not far from South Sudan border. Authorities have confirmed an Ebola case just 70 kilometres (43 miles) from Congo's border with South Sudan

The case was registered Tuesday in Ariwara, a trading center. The person, a 40-year-old woman, had traveled some 500 kilometers from Beni, in Congo's North Kivu province, according to Congolese officials.
North Kivu is an epicenter of the Ebola outbreak that has killed more than 1,500 people.  

Nyimol says it is the first confirmed case close to the South Sudan-DRC border since the outbreak erupted last August in eastern Congo.

He said for the last six months, South Sudan has been under high alert and increased its surveillance response at several border screening centers.

“We have points of entry doing screening at the high-risk states, we have Ebola treatment unit here in Juba and there is a laboratory and we have an ambulance ready for any suspect and there are trained staff and if there is a suspected case at Juba International Airport, it can be collected and taken for investigation; the same [is true] at the Juba Nimule border entry,” said Nyimol.

A number of people from the DRC cross into South Sudan’s Yei River State on a daily basis, according to South Sudanese health officials.

The Ebola virus is a deadly disease that affects humans and non-human primates.  Symptoms include unexplained bleeding, high fever, severe headache, muscle pain, weakness, and vomiting. The virus is spread through body fluids, such as the blood of an infected person.

Tuesday, August 06, 2019

S. Sudan: No confirmed Ebola case

Article from Middle East Monitor.com
Date: 26 July 2019 at 8:00 pm
South Sudan: No confirmed Ebola case
Photo: Personnel from Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) and the Kamenge Military Hospital practice doffing hazardous material suits at the Kamenge Military Hospital, Bujumbura, Burundi, June 20, 2019. [U.S. Navy photo/Nick Scott]

South Sudan is free from Ebola after reports of a suspected case early this week which has caused panic among citizens of the African country, the deputy information minister said Friday, Anadolu reported.

“Health Minister Dr Riek Gai Kok has announced in today’s cabinet meeting that there is no Ebola case in South Sudan so citizens should not panic,” Lily Albino Akol said.

“There is no confirmed Ebola case in the country. Early this week there was a scare whereby a patient has shown symptoms related to Ebola, including bleeding, and people thought that it might be Ebola,” she said.

”However, the preliminary results from the laboratory tests on the Ebola case in Juba have proven that the patient does not have the virus,” Akol told journalists after the cabinet meeting.

Akol said that the health minister had announced South Sudan is Ebola free and they will continue monitoring the bordering areas.

After a 40-year-old woman was reported to have shown Ebola-like symptoms, she was quarantined after the police informed the Ministry of Health of her condition on Wednesday.

The woman, who was moved to a special care unit in Juba, was immediately taken for laboratory tests, where the results were declared negative.

According to Dr. Riek Gai, more samples have been sent to Uganda for further verification.

“In case of any abnormal illness, they should inform a nearby health authority or even the police, or call the hotline that we have established,” Dr Gai said.

South Sudan has established four observatory centres across the country, and deployed health personnel along the borders and in various states.