Liberia Reports First Ebola Case in Weeks
By SHERI FINK and RICK GLADSTONE
New York Times
MARCH 20, 2015
A patient in Liberia has tested positive for the Ebola virus, health officials said Friday, more than two weeks after the last known case in the country had been discharged from the hospital.
The news deflated optimism that Liberia, one of the three West African countries hit by the Ebola epidemic that has killed more than 10,000 people since it began a year ago, would soon be officially declared free of the virus.
The patient, a 44-year-old woman from the Caldwell area near Monrovia, the capital, first developed symptoms around March 15, said Dr. Moses Massaquoi, leader of the Clinton Health Access Initiative in Liberia and national case manager of the Ebola response.
Two Liberian triage nurses employed by the International Rescue Committee, the American relief agency, were the first to suspect the patient’s symptoms when she arrived at Monrovia’s Redemption Hospital Thursday evening, Liz Hamann, the agency’s project leader, said by phone from Monrovia.
The nurses called in a team from an adjacent Ebola isolation center run by Doctors Without Borders, who arrived in protective gear and took the patient for testing. She was then transferred to a triage area run by Doctors Without Borders and later to a specialized Ebola treatment unit for testing, and the initial results came back positive on Friday, Dr. Massaquoi said by phone.
“We were all a little blindsided,” Ms. Hamann said.
Dr. Massaquoi said six people who had come into contact with the woman from the time she fell ill have been identified, and others were being sought.
Dr. David Nabarro, the United Nations secretary general’s special envoy on Ebola, was informed of the new case while traveling in Italy. He expressed disappointment but not surprise.
“We will have unfortunately some periods in which our hopes are dashed at this stage in the outbreak,” he said in a telephone interview. “That’s just the way it is. That’s why we’re going to have to keep going without any kind of letup until the very end.”
Dr. Nabarro and his colleagues have been emphasizing in recent weeks that the number of new cases in the Ebola zone — Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone — must be reduced to zero before they can declare the threat to be over.
New cases have declined sharply since last fall, when hundreds were becoming infected every week in all three countries. Liberia has made the most progress in reducing transmission.
On March 5, what was thought to have been Liberia’s last known patient was discharged from the hospital, a celebratory moment that raised optimism the country would soon be declared free of Ebola. For that designation, countries must wait 42 days from when the last patient tests negative for a second time.
“We knew something like this could possibly happen, so we have all the necessary setup in place to address it,” Dr. Massaquoi said. Still, he said, “Today has not been a good day for us.”
Liberia’s comeback has been considered a model of community organizing, which raised public awareness of the risks of transmission through physical contact and unsafe burials. Liberia also has been a leader in identifying contacts of Ebola victims, enabling health officials to monitor who might be at risk.
Dr. Bruce Aylward, the World Health Organization’s top Ebola official, described the nurses who first suspected the new Liberia case as heroes.
“They may have protected the whole country by finding the needle in the haystack,” he said in a phone interview.
“Someone found this. That’s the important thing,” he said. “What it means and tells us is that, first, never underestimate this virus, and people do.”
By SHERI FINK and RICK GLADSTONE
New York Times
MARCH 20, 2015
A patient in Liberia has tested positive for the Ebola virus, health officials said Friday, more than two weeks after the last known case in the country had been discharged from the hospital.
The news deflated optimism that Liberia, one of the three West African countries hit by the Ebola epidemic that has killed more than 10,000 people since it began a year ago, would soon be officially declared free of the virus.
The patient, a 44-year-old woman from the Caldwell area near Monrovia, the capital, first developed symptoms around March 15, said Dr. Moses Massaquoi, leader of the Clinton Health Access Initiative in Liberia and national case manager of the Ebola response.
Two Liberian triage nurses employed by the International Rescue Committee, the American relief agency, were the first to suspect the patient’s symptoms when she arrived at Monrovia’s Redemption Hospital Thursday evening, Liz Hamann, the agency’s project leader, said by phone from Monrovia.
The nurses called in a team from an adjacent Ebola isolation center run by Doctors Without Borders, who arrived in protective gear and took the patient for testing. She was then transferred to a triage area run by Doctors Without Borders and later to a specialized Ebola treatment unit for testing, and the initial results came back positive on Friday, Dr. Massaquoi said by phone.
“We were all a little blindsided,” Ms. Hamann said.
Dr. Massaquoi said six people who had come into contact with the woman from the time she fell ill have been identified, and others were being sought.
Dr. David Nabarro, the United Nations secretary general’s special envoy on Ebola, was informed of the new case while traveling in Italy. He expressed disappointment but not surprise.
“We will have unfortunately some periods in which our hopes are dashed at this stage in the outbreak,” he said in a telephone interview. “That’s just the way it is. That’s why we’re going to have to keep going without any kind of letup until the very end.”
Dr. Nabarro and his colleagues have been emphasizing in recent weeks that the number of new cases in the Ebola zone — Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone — must be reduced to zero before they can declare the threat to be over.
New cases have declined sharply since last fall, when hundreds were becoming infected every week in all three countries. Liberia has made the most progress in reducing transmission.
On March 5, what was thought to have been Liberia’s last known patient was discharged from the hospital, a celebratory moment that raised optimism the country would soon be declared free of Ebola. For that designation, countries must wait 42 days from when the last patient tests negative for a second time.
“We knew something like this could possibly happen, so we have all the necessary setup in place to address it,” Dr. Massaquoi said. Still, he said, “Today has not been a good day for us.”
Liberia’s comeback has been considered a model of community organizing, which raised public awareness of the risks of transmission through physical contact and unsafe burials. Liberia also has been a leader in identifying contacts of Ebola victims, enabling health officials to monitor who might be at risk.
Dr. Bruce Aylward, the World Health Organization’s top Ebola official, described the nurses who first suspected the new Liberia case as heroes.
“They may have protected the whole country by finding the needle in the haystack,” he said in a phone interview.
“Someone found this. That’s the important thing,” he said. “What it means and tells us is that, first, never underestimate this virus, and people do.”
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