“While the news is very encouraging, there are still a number of high risk contacts,” UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric cautioned during the regular press briefing at UN Headquarters on Thursday.
He said, “Previous experience indicates that at the tail end of an Ebola outbreak, we may see weeks with zero transmission interspersed with some flare-ups.”
WHO, in its latest update ending on Sunday, 4 October, stated that no new cases were reported in Guinea and Sierra Leone. Liberia was declared free of Ebola virus transmission in the human population on 3 September 2015.
To date, the Ebola outbreak in West Africa has resulted in more than 11,000 deaths.
“This is the first time that a complete epidemiological week has elapsed with zero confirmed cases since March 2014,” the latest WHO report update said.
“All contacts have now completed follow-up in Sierra Leone,” it said. “However, over 500 contacts remain under follow-up in Guinea, and several high-risk contacts associated with active and recently active chains of transmission in Guinea and Sierra Leone have been lost to follow-up.”
WHO cautioned: “There remains a near-term risk of further cases.
The health agency also said that “robust” surveillance measures are needed to ensure the rapid detection of any reintroduction or re-emergence of Ebola in currently unaffected areas.
Photo: WHO Sierra Leone/S. Gborie
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