The Ebola outbreak in Guinea and its spread to other
areas of West Africa, including Nigeria has caused global alarm. According to
the Centre for Disease Control, since the detection of Ebola in March, the
number of suspected and confirmed cases attributed to Ebola in the West African
countries, such as Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Nigeria stands at 1,711.
Meanwhile, a Saudi man tested for the disease has died in Jeddah
after returning from Sierra Leone on Sunday. If there were a linkage of the
Saudi man’s death to the Ebola virus, it would be the first fatality outside
the West African countries.
As one of the world’s most infectious and deadly diseases, with
no cure, the level of fear, surrounding Ebola is to an extent expected.
However, much of the fear is rooted in misunderstandings. Dispelling this is
perhaps the biggest challenge in tackling Ebola and is critical to furthering
our knowledge about the disease and efforts to control it.
Here
is the myth versus the truth about some of the most common misconceptions about
Ebola virus:
MYTH: EBOLA
VIRUS IS AIRBORNE, WATERBORNE OR SPREADS THROUGH CASUAL CONTACT.
Truth:
Ebola virus spreads when the bodily fluids of an infected person meet the
mucous membranes of a non-infected person. That means Ebola virus in fluids,
such as saliva, blood, sweat or urine has to be exposed to your eyes, mouth,
nostrils, ears, genital area or an open wound in order to infect you.
In
other words, it takes a lot of contact, not just casual contact, to become
infected with the virus. This is the reason why many of the victims of the
disease in West Africa are health care workers or family members caring for a
sick relative. For example, the Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu,
during a news conference in Abuja, revealed that a nurse, who was one of the
medical personnel that attended to the late Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer,
died of the disease. He also confirmed that five other medical practitioners,
who participated in the treatment of Sawyer, were infected with the virus.
MYTH: THIS IS THE FIRST MAJOR OUTBREAK OF EBOLA.
Truth:
This is the largest outbreak of Ebola in history, but it is not the first. The
virus was first diagnosed in humans in 1976 in the Democratic Republic of
Congo, where it infected 318 people and had an 88 per cent fatality rate. Since
then, various strains of the disease have popped up around the African
continent, infecting as many as 425 people in 2000, and most recently, 57
people in 2012, according to World Health Organisation, as of August 4, 2014,
the most recent count available, Ebola virus in Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone
and Nigeria since the virus emerged again this year.
MYTH: EBOLA
CAN BE TREATED WITH ANTIBIOTICS, CHEWING LARGE QUANTITY OF BITTER KOLA, ONIONS,
OR DRINKING CONDENSED MILK.
Truth:
Antibiotics cure bacterial infections, not viral infections. At present, there
is neither a cure nor a vaccine for the Ebola virus. Instead, there is an
experimental serum called ZMapp, which contains
antibodies designed to help block the virus. Before the 2014 Ebola outbreak, it
was only tested on monkeys and has not been approved for human use.
MYTH: EBOLA
LIQUEFIES YOUR ORGANS, WHICH CAUSES BLEEDING FROM THE ORIFICES.
Truth:Ebola
symptoms can include bleeding from the eyes, ears, nose and mouth. However, the
body’s organs are not liquefied. Once the Ebola virus makes its way into the
body, it gets in the body’s cells and replicates itself. Then it produces a
protein that is called ebolavirus glycoprotein, and attaches to the cells on
the inside of the blood vessels. This increases permeability of the blood
vessels, leading to blood “leaking out” of the vessels. Even people who do not
show hemorrhagic symptoms will experience this leaking of blood from the
vessels. The continuous loss of blood will eventually lead to shock and ultimately
death.
To
reduce the risk of human-to-human transmission in the community, close contact
with infected patients, particularly with their bodily fluids need to be
avoided. Also, do not touch sick people who show symptoms of Ebola, such as
fever, diarrhoea, vomiting, headaches and sometimes heavy bleeding.
Gloves
and appropriate personal protective equipment should be worn when taking care
of ill patients at home. Regular hand washing is required after visiting
patients in hospital, as well as after taking care of patients at home.
Do
not touch the dead bodies of suspected or confirmed Ebola patients. Wash your
hands with water and soap regularly.
Make
use of hand sanitisers after coming in contact with objects for use in public
places
Communities
with any suspected case of Ebola should inform the relevant authorities.
There
should be prompt and safe burial of people who have died of Ebola.
In
conclusion, reducing the risk of wildlife-to-human transmission from contact
with infected fruit bats, monkeys, apes, can be achieved by thorough cooking of
animal products, such as blood and meat, to proper heat and sterilising
procedures. At this time, the consumption of raw meat should be discouraged.
Animals should be handled with gloves and other appropriate protective
clothing.
well done sir....ebola whether myth, fact or truth should be avoided...its a plague trying ravish humanity...
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