U.N. health agency questions Tanzania's Ebola-like cases

Tanzania’s government, which has said it has no Ebola cases, could not immediately be reached for comment

September 22, 2019 05:55 pm | Updated 05:58 pm IST - JOHANNESBURG

A rapid response is crucial in containing Ebola. File (Representational image)

A rapid response is crucial in containing Ebola. File (Representational image)

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has issued an unusual statement raising questions about whether Tanzania is covering up possible cases of the deadly Ebola virus, a significant cause for concern during a regional outbreak that has been declared a rare global health emergency.

The statement on September 21 says Tanzania’s government “despite several requests” has not shared its clinical data, the results of its investigations or the possible contacts of a number of patients with Ebola-like symptoms.

Tanzania’s government, which has said it has no Ebola cases, could not immediately be reached for comment on September 22. The cases would be the first-ever Ebola infections confirmed in the East African country.

The United Nations health agency says it was made aware on Sept. 10 of the death in Tanzania’s commercial capital, Dar es Salaam, of a patient suspected to have Ebola. A day later, it received unofficial reports that an Ebola test had come back positive. On September 19, it received unofficial reports that a contact of the patient, who had traveled widely in the country, was sick and hospitalised.

A rapid response is crucial in containing Ebola, which can be fatal in up to 90% of cases and is most often spread by close contact with bodily fluids of people exhibiting symptoms or with contaminated objects.

The WHO statement said the lack of information from Tanzania made it difficult to assess potential risks.

The Ebola outbreak based in neighboring Congo has infected over 3,000 people and killed nearly 2,000 of them. A few cases have been confirmed in neighboring Uganda as well, and other neighbouring countries have been preparing for the outbreak’s possible spread.

This is not the first time health officials have raised serious questions about the suspected Tanzania cases. On September 16, the U.S. health and human services secretary, Alex Azar, told reporters in Uganda that he and others were “very concerned about the lack of transparency” in Tanzania.

Critics have shown increasing alarm as Tanzanian President John Magufuli’s government has restricted access to key information and cracked down on perceived dissent. Lawmakers recently approved an amendment to a statistics law to make it a crime to distribute information not sanctioned by the government or which contradicts the government.

The World Bank was among those expressing concern at that amendment.

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