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Focus on Frontline Health Care: Ebolavirus in Africa

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In December 2013, a one-year-old boy in Guinea died from complications of Ebola virus: he was the first victim of what would become an epidemic that claimed over 11,000 lives and lasted more than two years. During this period, the virus spread to the neighboring countries of Liberia and Sierra Leone, and it is conservatively estimated that more than 28,000 individuals became infected from December 2013 to late 2016. The epidemic was fueled, in part, by poverty, social unrest, armed conflict, and inadequate or absent health care systems. Furthermore, local burial customs, including ritual washing of the corpse, facilitated person-to-person transmission. Air transportation of infected persons out of these areas caused infections in health care workers, including in hospitals in Spain and the United States. While these latter cases did not spread further, the entry of this highly lethal virus into these countries created widespread public anxiety in these countries. Such anxiety likely contributed to greater awareness of the devastation that was in progress on the west coast of Africa.

Ebola virus is probably transmitted by bats, and, indeed, the index patient’s village was located near a large bat colony. Ebola virus is spread by direct contact with body fluids: mucus, saliva, blood, and, as determined later, semen. Ebola hemorrhagic fever, which typically starts with high fever, headache, and muscle pain, often progresses to vomiting, diarrhea, and rash, and eventually kidney and liver impairment. In some infected individuals, rupture of infected blood vessels leads to internal and external bleeding (hence the name hemorrhagic fever), which can cause death from low blood pressure and fluid loss. The disease carries an extremely high risk of death, killing between 25 and 90% of those infected, although the odds of survival are directly dependent on the efficiency and quality of health care: providing fluids (saline, blood transfusions) greatly increases an infected individual’s chances of survival.

More than any epidemic in recent memory, media attention was particularly focused on the health care workers on site, who provided care for the victims and potential victims (Fig. 1.7). The Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), which received the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize for its work throughout the developing world, provided much of this frontline care. In late 2014, at the peak of the epidemic, physicians and support personnel were exhausted, hospitals had little room for new patients, and lack of adequate resources forced heartbreaking choices on those doctors: provide optimal care to a few or substandard care to many. To care for the victims, medical personnel put themselves in extreme danger: despite protective gear, approximately 10% of Ebola virus fatalities occurred in health care workers. Lack of running water, oppressive temperatures, and outdated sup plies were all likely contributors.

Eventually, border closings, mandatory quarantines, and public education that led to changes in burial practices slowed the spread of the epidemic. In December 2016, the WHO announced, after a two-year trial, that a recombinant vaccine appeared to offer protection from the Zaire strain of Ebola responsible for the West Africa outbreak (Chapters 7 and 9).


Figure 1.7 Ebola outbreak. Health care workers in areas of the Ebola virus outbreak are completely protected from any contact with body fluids from a potentially infected individual. Standard safety protection includes a suit, apron, boots, gowns, gloves, masks, and goggles. One physician working in Sierra Leone stated: “After about 30 or 40 minutes, your goggles have fogged up; your socks are completely drenched in sweat. You’re just walking in water in your boots. And at that point, you have to exit for your own safety … Here it takes 20–25 minutes to take off a protective suit and must be done with two trained supervisors who watch every step in a military manner to ensure no mistakes are made, because a slip up can easily occur and of course can be fatal.” AP Photo/ Jerome Delay, File 288676002851.

Though the impact of the virus abated, epidemics have long-lasting economic ramifications: it has been estimated that the financial toll of this epidemic exceeded $1.6 billion, accelerating poverty, which, as estimated by one news organization, likely caused as many deaths as the outbreak itself.

Principles of Virology, Volume 2

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