2015-01-22 16:11
Geneva - The Ebola epidemic in West Africa appears to be ebbing,
with fewer than 150 cases reported in the past week, but efforts must
be pursued to stamp out the deadly disease, the World Health
Organization (WHO) said on Thursday.
Sierra Leone remains
hardest-hit, accounting for 117 of the 145 new confirmed cases, against
184 there the previous week and 248 the week before that, the WHO said
in its latest update.
"Case incidence continues to fall in Guinea,
Liberia, and Sierra Leone," the United Nations agency said, adding that
disease surveillance was being stepped up in border districts of
Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali and Senegal.
Every 10 days the
number of new cases is halving in Guinea -- where, at 20, the figure was
the lowest since early August, it said. In Liberia, where confirmed
cases last week fell to 8 from a peak of more than 300 per week in
August and September, it takes two weeks to halve, and in Sierra Leone
nearly 20 days.
In
all, there have been 21,724 cases of Ebola reported in nine countries
in the past year since the epidemic began in Guinea, including 8,641
deaths, the WHO said.
The virus has been stamped out in Mali,
Nigeria and Senegal, and there have been no further cases among foreign
health workers returning to Britain, Spain or the United States,
although a British nurse is recovering in hospital in London.
To date, 828 health care workers have been infected in the three worst-hit countries, including 499 who died, it said.
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