Sierra Leone declared free of Ebola transmissions

Nearly 4,000 people have died in the West African country of the virus since the outbreak began in late 2013.

November 07, 2015 05:28 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 01:00 am IST - FREETOWN (SIERRA LEONE):

Health workers carry the body of a suspected Ebola victim for burial at a cemetery in Freetown, capital of Sierra Leone, in this December 21, 2014 photo. The World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone free from Ebola transmissions on Saturday, as West Africa battles to stamp out the deadly virus that is still holding on in neighbouring Guinea.

Health workers carry the body of a suspected Ebola victim for burial at a cemetery in Freetown, capital of Sierra Leone, in this December 21, 2014 photo. The World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone free from Ebola transmissions on Saturday, as West Africa battles to stamp out the deadly virus that is still holding on in neighbouring Guinea.

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared Sierra Leone free from Ebola transmissions on Saturday, as West Africa battles to stamp out the deadly virus that is holding on in neighbouring Guinea.

Nearly 4,000 people have died in Sierra Leone of Ebola since the outbreak began in late 2013. The organization said 42 days have passed since the last confirmed Ebola patient was discharged on September 25 after two consecutive negative test results.

Dr. Anders Nordstrom, Sierra Leone representative for the WHO, made the declaration at a ceremony in the Sierra Leone capital on Saturday.

Criterion for such declaration

A country must go through 42 days equal to two incubation periods of 21 days without an Ebola case in order for WHO to declare it free of Ebola transmission. It’s a benchmark that neighbouring Liberia reached in May only to then experience a brief reappearance of cases before it was declared free from transmissions again in September.

Sierra Leone had at one point begun the 42-day countdown only to discover a new Ebola case.

Guinea, only affected country

Guinea, where the epidemic began, now remains the only country struggling to rid itself of the disease. WHO has recorded seven new cases in neighbouring Guinea in the past 21 days.

Sierra Leone now enters a 90-day intensive surveillance period. Authorities there caution that vigilance must continue.

“Until the entire West African region records zero cases and Sierra Leone continues with heightened vigilance beyond 42 days, and beyond 90 days, then and only then the region can think of true recovery,” said Alfred Palo Conteh, Chief Executive Officer of Sierra Leone’s National Ebola Response Centre.

Weak leadership, infighting

Weak leadership, shoddy supplies and infighting worsened the battle against the current Ebola outbreak that has killed some 11,000 people mainly in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, and WHO has been criticised for its response.

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