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A student at Olumawu School is guided
through the use of hand sanitizer in Abuja, Nigeria, on Sept. 22. (Reuters)
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While
devastating reports continue to stream out of West Africa, where the
deadly virus has overwhelmed already weak public health systems and left thousands of people dead, and anxiety grips the
United States over the first case of Ebola diagnosed in the country, one
nation serves as an example of hope: Nigeria, which appears to have successfully contained Ebola.
As concerns spread over U.S. hospital readiness, there are some lessons to be learned from Nigeria, where officials managed to get ahead of the fast-moving virus after it was brought into Africa's most populous country by an Ebola-infected man who'd flown into Lagos.
As concerns spread over U.S. hospital readiness, there are some lessons to be learned from Nigeria, where officials managed to get ahead of the fast-moving virus after it was brought into Africa's most populous country by an Ebola-infected man who'd flown into Lagos.
This week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the outbreak could be coming to an end in Nigeria, with no new Ebola cases since Aug. 31.
As
in the U.S. case, Ebola arrived in Nigeria by passenger plane. But unlike
Thomas Eric Duncan — who
arrived in Dallas before he became symptomatic and was therefore not
contagious during his flights from Liberia to Texas through Brussels and Dulles
International Airport — Patrick Sawyer was already symptomatic when he landed
in Lagos on July 20. At that point, Sawyer, Nigeria's Patient Zero, was
contagious and dying.
It
was a nightmare scenario with the potential to spiral out of control, given the
bustling city of Lagos, Africa's largest, is a major transportation hub. As
Sawyer was placed in isolation, public health officials had to track down every
single person who'd come into contact with him, from the flights he'd
boarded to the Lagos airport and the private hospital where he went after
landing. And they had to do so quickly, making the process known as contact tracing a priority.
"In
the whole system approach in beating the war on Ebola, contact tracing is the
key public health activity that needs to be done," said Gavin
MacGregor-Skinner, who helped with the Ebola response in Nigeria with
the Elizabeth R. Griffin Research Foundation. "The key is
to find all the people that patient had direct close contact with."
From that single
patient came a list of 281 people, MacGregor-Skinner said. Every one of those
individuals had to provide health authorities twice-a-day updates about
their well-being, often through methods like text-messaging. Anyone who didn't
feel well or failed to respond was checked on, either through a neighborhood
network or health workers.
Nigeria
took a "whole community approach," with everyone from military
officials to church elders in the same room, discussing how to handle the
response to the virus, MacGregor-Skinner said.
Such
an approach, and contact tracing in general, requires people be open and
forthright about their movements and their health, he said. Stigmatization of
patients, their families and contacts could only discourage that, so Nigerian
officials sent a message to "really make them look like
heroes," MacGregor-Skinner said.
"This
is the best thing people can do for Nigeria: They are going to protect and save
Nigeria by being honest, by doing what they need to do, by reporting to the
health commission," he said. This made people feel like they were a part
of something extremely important, he said, and also took into account real
community needs. "You got real engagement and compliance from the
contacts. They're not running and hiding."
Sawyer
had come into contact with someone who ended up in Port Harcourt. That person,
a regional official, went to a doctor who ended up dying from Ebola in August.
Within a week, 70 people were being monitored. It ballooned to an additional
400 people in that one city.
Success
stories of people coming through strict Ebola surveillance alive and
healthy helped
encourage more people to come forward, as they recognized that ending
up in a contact tracer's sights didn't mean a death sentence.
In
the end, contact tracers — trained professionals and volunteers —
conducted 18,500 face-to-face visits to assess potential symptoms, according to
the CDC, and the list of contacts throughout the country grew to 894. Two
months later, Nigeria ended up with a total of 20 confirmed or probable cases
and eight deaths.
The
CDC also
pointed to the robust public health response by Nigerian officials, who
have had experience with massive public health crises in the past — namely
polio in 2012 and large-scale lead poisoning in 2010.
When
someone is on a contact list, that doesn't
mean that person has to stay at home for the entire incubation period of 21
days from the last contact with someone who had Ebola. People on contact
lists are not under quarantine or in isolation. They can still go to work and
go on with their their lives. But they should take their temperature twice
a day for 21 days and check in with health workers.
Officials
in Texas began with a list of about
100 names; they have whittled the list down to 50 people who had some
contact with Duncan. Of
those, 10 are considered high-risk.
The
CDC recommends
that people without symptoms but who have had direct contact with the bodily
fluids of a person sick with Ebola be put under either conditional release,
meaning that they self-monitor their health and temperature and check in daily,
or controlled movement. People under controlled movement have to notify
officials about any intended travel and shouldn't use commercial planes or
trains. Local public transportation use is approved on a case-by-case basis.
When symptoms do develop, that's when the response kicks into high gear. People
with Ebola are contagious only once they begin exhibiting symptoms, which
include fever, severe headaches and vomiting.
While
four people in Dallas are under government-ordered quarantine, that is not
the norm. Those individuals "were non-compliant with the request to
stay home. I don’t want to go too far beyond that," Dallas County Judge
Clay Lewis Jenkins said
Thursday.
On Friday, the four people were moved to a private residence from the apartment where Duncan had been staying when he became symptomatic.
A
law enforcement officer will remain with them to enforce the order, and none of
the people are allowed to leave until Oct. 19.
Duncan
is the only person with an Ebola diagnosis in Dallas, and no one else is
showing symptoms at the moment. But, as Nigeria knows, the work in Dallas has just begun.
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com

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