2015-01-14 12:46
If the current high rates of monitoring and hospitalisation
continue, the Ebola epidemic in Liberia could be halted by the middle of
this year, researchers report.
After including data collected as
of Dec. 1, 2014, a computer model projected that the Ebola infections
in Liberia could be largely contained by June, according to the study
published Jan. 13 in the journal PLoS Biology.
"That's a
realistic possibility but not a foregone conclusion. What's needed is to
maintain the current level of vigilance and keep pressing forward as
hard as we can," project leader John Drake, an associate professor in
the School of Ecology at the University of Georgia, said in a journal
news release.
Also Read: Liberia says limits Ebola spread to just two counties
The
computer model assessed factors such as the location of Ebola
infections and treatment, hospital capacity and safe burial practices.
The researchers ran the model for five different hospital
capacity scenarios for 2014. In the worst-case scenario - with no
increase in hospital beds - the median projection was 130,000 Ebola
cases.
In the best-case scenario - with an increase of 1,400 hospital beds - the median projection was 50,000 Ebola cases.
So
far, there have been more than 21,000 Ebola cases and more than 8,300
deaths since the outbreak began last year in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra
Leone, according to the World Health Organization.
The computer
model used in this latest study is more complex and therefore more
accurate than many other models, and could also be used in different
types of outbreaks in the future, according to Drake.
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