The
Ebola outbreak in West Africa could infect 20,000 people as soon as early
November unless rigorous infection control measures are implemented, and might
"rumble on" for years in a holding pattern, researchers said on
Tuesday.
In
an article in the New England Journal of Medicine, experts from the World
Health Organization and Imperial College said that infections will continue
climbing exponentially unless patients are isolated, contacts traced and
communities enlisted.
The
WHO, in an initial roadmap issued on Aug 28, predicted that the virus could
strike 20,000 people within the next nine months. The current death toll is at
least 2,811 out of 5,864 cases, the U.N. agency says.
The
latest study, marking six months from March 23, when the WHO says it was
informed of the Ebola outbreak in southeastern Guinea, reflects projections
based on the data from a third wave of the virus in Guinea, Sierra Leone and
worst-hit Liberia.
"With
exponential growth, you'll see that
the case numbers per week go up so that by
the second of November, over these three countries our best estimate is over
20,000 cases, confirmed and suspected cases," Dr. Christopher Dye, the WHO
director of strategy, and co-author of article, told a briefing.
Nearly
10,000 of those would be in Liberia, 5,000 in Sierra Leone and nearly 6,000 in
Guinea, he said. But those numbers would only come about with no enhanced
infection control.
"Everyone
is certainly working very hard to make sure this is a not the reality that we
will be seeing," Dye said. "I will be surprised if we hit 20,000 by
then," he later added.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said last week that under a $1 billion plan, he
will create a special mission to combat the disease and deployed staff to the
region.
"If
control is completely successful in the way that we know it can be, then Ebola
will disappear from the human population of West Africa and probably return to
its animal reservoir," Dye said, noting that fruit bats were probably the
reservoir.
But
if control efforts are only partly successful, Ebola viral disease in the human
population could become "a permanent feature of life in West Africa",
Dye said.
"The
alternative possibility that we're talking about is that the epidemic simply
rumbles on as it has for the last few months for the next few years, on the
order of years, rather than months.
"Under
those circumstances, the fear is that Ebola will be more or less a permanent
feature of the human population. Of course it could be extinguished later on."
In
the three hardest-hit countries there was a "mixed pattern", Dye
said.
"We
see for example in the border areas of Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, some
areas where there has been no increase in cases for some weeks now. That's true
in Sierra Leone, it's true in Lofa in northern Liberia, and it's true in one of
the provinces of Guinea.
"So
the question that arises is whether we're actually seeing the beginning of a
stationary pattern in this epidemic.
In
two badly affected districts of Sierra Leone, Kenema and Kailahun, close to
border areas with Guinea and Liberia, there has been a stationary pattern, he
said.
"What
we've seen in the past weeks there, maybe eight, nine, 10 weeks now, is a
pattern of incidence, numbers of cases per week, which has not significantly
changed.
"And
indeed there are signs that it's going down. And I say that cautiously, because
we're prepared to be surprised again. That is what I mean by stationary
pattern. A steady incidence week on week."
There
are other reassuring signs about the efficacy of infection control measures, he
said, but whether the disease's spread was stabilising would become clear in
the next few weeks.
No
new cases have been recorded in either Nigeria or Senegal in the last three
weeks, corresponding to the 21-day incubation period for developing the
virulent virus, whose symptoms include fever, vomiting and diarrhoea.
"It
is reassuring in many ways that a disease like Ebola can enter a city of 20
million, namely Lagos, and we are able to stop transmission, or rather the
people of Nigeria are able to stop transmission," Dye said.
But
the Liberian capital Monrovia, where the disease has recently spread fastest,
was "uncharted territory", he said.
"Quite
honestly if you ask 'can we stamp Ebola out of Liberia?' I'm not sure. In
principle we know how to do it, but can we do it on the ground? It remains to
be seen."
Reuters
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