British health workers lift a newly admitted Ebola patient onto a wheeled stretcher. (Reuters)
Accra:
Medical detective work will be the next big phase in the fight against Ebola when the United Nations deploys hundreds of health workers to identify chains of infection as the virus passes from person to person, top UN health workers said.
The health teams will travel to each district and region of Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, the three countries at the centre of the epidemic, to trace who each infected person has potentially contacted.
The effort will run in parallel with measures to minimize the spread of infection, such as treating all Ebola patients in specialized centres and burying all victims safely.
But Phase Two of the plan is to contain the virus by understanding its lines of transmission, said World Health Organization Director-General Margaret Chan.
"You chase the virus. You hunt the virus. The virus lives in an infected person so you chase every case, isolate them and then all the people who come into contact with the infected person," Chan told Reuters on a visit to West Africa.
She was accompanying UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on a four-country tour to encourage health workers and focus global attention on the fight against the epidemic.
The world's worst Ebola outbreak has killed 7,518 of 19,340 confirmed cases, according to WHO figures on Monday, though the number of new cases is slowing in most places.
The disease spreads through contact with an infected person or corpse, so family members who care for patients or people who prepare victims for burial are at risk.
As a result, people often know how they fell ill. Patients who say they do not know are a concern because their cases can signify chains of transmission yet to be identified, Chan said.
"You don't have control of Ebola until you know where all your transmission chains are and until your cases are coming from known contact lists," said Bruce Aylward, WHO's head of Ebola response.
"You always hear about disease detective work and that is what Ebola is about now," he said. Contact-tracing involves visiting households to pick up signs of illness, and requires cooperation from local authorities and community leaders.
Illustrating the scale of the challenge, 25 per cent of new cases in Liberia are coming from new sources, Aylward said. By contrast, officials in Guinea said in November all the cases in the capital stemmed from just four chains of transmission.
The overall cost of the Ebola response could rise to around $4.1 billion, said U.N. Special Envoy on Ebola David Nabarro.
To accomplish Phase Two, the U.N. health agency will mobilise 900 epidemiologists, triple the number currently available, he said. Around half will be foreigners.
The aim is to get teams in place by the end of January, following a separate plan to get all patients treated and all victims safely buried by the end of this month.
The health teams will travel to each district and region of Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, the three countries at the centre of the epidemic, to trace who each infected person has potentially contacted.
The effort will run in parallel with measures to minimize the spread of infection, such as treating all Ebola patients in specialized centres and burying all victims safely.
But Phase Two of the plan is to contain the virus by understanding its lines of transmission, said World Health Organization Director-General Margaret Chan.
"You chase the virus. You hunt the virus. The virus lives in an infected person so you chase every case, isolate them and then all the people who come into contact with the infected person," Chan told Reuters on a visit to West Africa.
She was accompanying UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on a four-country tour to encourage health workers and focus global attention on the fight against the epidemic.
The world's worst Ebola outbreak has killed 7,518 of 19,340 confirmed cases, according to WHO figures on Monday, though the number of new cases is slowing in most places.
The disease spreads through contact with an infected person or corpse, so family members who care for patients or people who prepare victims for burial are at risk.
As a result, people often know how they fell ill. Patients who say they do not know are a concern because their cases can signify chains of transmission yet to be identified, Chan said.
"You don't have control of Ebola until you know where all your transmission chains are and until your cases are coming from known contact lists," said Bruce Aylward, WHO's head of Ebola response.
"You always hear about disease detective work and that is what Ebola is about now," he said. Contact-tracing involves visiting households to pick up signs of illness, and requires cooperation from local authorities and community leaders.
Illustrating the scale of the challenge, 25 per cent of new cases in Liberia are coming from new sources, Aylward said. By contrast, officials in Guinea said in November all the cases in the capital stemmed from just four chains of transmission.
The overall cost of the Ebola response could rise to around $4.1 billion, said U.N. Special Envoy on Ebola David Nabarro.
To accomplish Phase Two, the U.N. health agency will mobilise 900 epidemiologists, triple the number currently available, he said. Around half will be foreigners.
The aim is to get teams in place by the end of January, following a separate plan to get all patients treated and all victims safely buried by the end of this month.
© Thomson Reuters 2014
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world