Accra - West
African states lack the resources to battle the world's worst outbreak of Ebola
and deep cultural suspicions about the disease remain a big obstacle to halting
its spread, ministers said on Wednesday.
West African
health ministers meeting in Ghana to draw up a regional response mixed appeals
for cash with warnings of the practices that have allowed the disease to spread
across borders and into cities.
Abubakarr Fofanah,
deputy health minister for Sierra Leone, a country with one of the world's
weakest health systems, said cash was needed for drugs, basic protective gear
and staff pay.
Sierra Leone
announced on Wednesday that President Ernest Bai Koroma, his vice-president and
all cabinet ministers would donate half of their salaries to help fight the
outbreak, though the total amount of the donations was not disclosed.
“In Liberia, our
biggest challenge is denial, fear and panic. Our people are very much afraid of
the disease,” Bernice Dahn, Liberia's deputy health minister, told Reuters on
the sidelines of the Accra meeting.
“People are afraid
but do not believe that the disease exists and because of that people get sick
and the community members hide them and bury them, against all the norms we
have put in place,” she said.
Authorities are
trying to stop relatives of Ebola victims from giving them traditional
funerals, which often involve the manual washing of the body, out of fear of
spreading the infection. The dead are instead meant to be buried by health
staff wearing protective gear.
Neighbouring
Sierra Leone faces many of the same problems, with dozens of those infected
evading treatment, complicating efforts to trace cases.
The Red Cross in
Guinea said it had been forced to temporarily suspend some operations in the
country's south-east after staff working on Ebola were threatened.
“Locals wielding
knives surrounded a marked Red Cross vehicle,” a Red Cross official said,
asking not to be named. The official said operations had been halted for safety
reasons. The Red Cross later said only international staff were removed.
A Medecins Sans
Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) centre in Guinea was attacked by youths in
April after staff were accused of bringing the disease into the country.
Ebola causes
fever, vomiting, bleeding and diarrhoea and kills up to 90 percent of those it
infects. Highly contagious, it is transmitted through contact with blood or
other fluids.
The WHO has
flagged three main factors driving its spread: the burial of victims in
accordance with tradition, the dense populations around the capital cities of
Guinea and Liberia and the bustling cross-border trade across the region.
Health experts say
the top priority must be containing Ebola with basic infection control measures
such as vigilant handwashing and hygiene, and isolation of infected patients.
Jeremy Farrar, a
professor of tropical medicine and director of The Wellcome Trust, an
influential global health charity, said people at high risk should also be
offered experimental medicines, despite the drugs not having been fully tested.
“We have more than
450 deaths so far, and not a single individual has been offered anything beyond
tepid sponging and 'we'll bury you nicely',” Farrar told Reuters in an
interview. “It's just unacceptable.
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