11 Nisan 2014 Cuma

Ebola experts in west Africa battle to stem deadly outbreak in photographs










Health care authorities in Guinea and other neighbouring African nations are struggling to include an outbreak of Ebola, one particular of the world’s deadliest viruses. The tropical pathogen, which can trigger haemorrhagic fever and organ failure, has a fatality charge of up to 90%. The outbreak has killed a lot more than two-thirds of those who have been infected, which includes 101 men and women in Guinea and neighbouring Liberia









People gather next to a billboard to promote newborn registration on April 1, 2014 in a street of Gueckedou. Gueckedou, a market city of 220000 people near the Liberia and Sierra Leone borders, is on the front line of Guinea
Guéckédou, a bustling city close to the border of Liberia and Sierra Leone, is on the frontline of Guinea’s more and more desperate struggle to contain 1 of the worst outbreaks of Ebola in history. Photograph: Seullou/AFP/Getty
A nurse of the
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is top the mission to stem the spread of Ebola. The healthcare charity has erected a pair of tin-roofed tents outside a overall health centre in southern Guinea, the epicentre of the outbreak. One particular tent houses suspected Ebola cases the other, confirmed ones. Workers say they are constructing a third tent for survivors and hope that the virus can be contained. Photograph: Seullou/AFP/Getty
A scientist separates blood cells from plasma cells to isolate any Ebola RNA in order to test for the virus at the European Mobile Laboratory in Gueckedou
A scientist in a mobile laboratory in Guéckédou separates blood cells from plasma in order to test for the virus. It is a lot more than two months given that the outbreak erupted in west Africa. Experts say it could get months to halt the spread of the pathogen. Photograph: Misha Hussain/Reuters
Health specialists work in an isolation ward for patients at the Doctors Without Borders facility in Guekedou, southern Guinea.
Overall health specialists prepare to examine a patient in an isolation ward. Ebola carriers have a greater likelihood of survival if medical care is administered quickly right after infection. Hiccups, say medical doctors, are the ultimate telltale signal of infection. Individuals can be discharged from isolation units soon right after their clinical signs, such as fever and diarrhoea, disappear. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Photos
A patient arrived at the ebola healthcare structure in Guéckédou .
The household of a patient pay attention from afar as a nurse administers therapy. In previous outbreaks, the sick have been occasionally abandoned by their households or dumped outdoors isolation wards. Survivors can typically be stigmatised and direct speak to with them avoided. Transmission of the condition is not understood in a lot of remote villages, where some suspect the virus is brought on by witchcraft. Photograph: Amandine Colin/MSF
Staff of MSF carry the body of a person killed by viral haemorrhagic fever, at a center for victims of the Ebola virus in Guekedou, Guinea
MSF workers eliminate the entire body of an Ebola victim. Health-related employees and water sanitation professionals will support the family of the deceased to prepare the entire body for burial. Right after washing the entire body with chlorine and putting it in a plastic bag, authorities will provide gloves and chlorine to funeral attendees to minimize the chance of contagion. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Images
A view of gloves and boots used by medical staff, drying in the sun, at a center for victims of the Ebola virus in Guekedou
Gloves and boots belonging to health care employees dry in the sun. The Ebola virus is passed by means of make contact with with blood, sweat and other bodily fluids of infected people or animals. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Photographs
Health workers teach people about the Ebola virus and how to prevent infection, in Conakry, Guinea
Wellness employees in Conkary, the Guinea capital, educate villagers how to prevent infection. There is no remedy for Ebola, which was identified in Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1976. In the past 4 decades, the virus has struck several African nations with alarming regularity. Photograph: Youssouf Bah/AP
a talk about viral haemorrhagic fever. The viral haemorrhagic fever epidemic raging in Guinea is caused by several viruses which have similar symptoms -- the deadliest and most feared of which is Ebola.
An MSF nurse briefs colleagues and Guinean medical professionals on the virus. The viral haemorrhagic fever epidemic raging in Guinea is caused by many viruses with equivalent symptoms – the deadliest of which is Ebola. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Photos
A woman walks past dried bushmeat near a road of the Yamoussoukro highway March 29, 2014. Bushmeat - from bats to antelopes, squirrels, porcupines and monkeys - has long held pride of place on family menus in West and Central Africa, whether stewed, smoked or roasted. Experts who have studied the Ebola virus from its discovery in 1976 in Democratic Republic of Congo, then Zaire, say its suspected origin - what they call the reservoir host - is forest bats. Links have also been made to the carcasses of freshly slaughtered animals consumed as bushmeat.
A female seems suspiciously at dried meat, near the Yamoussoukro highway in the Ivory Coast. Bushmeat, which can comprise something from squirrels to antelopes, is well-liked in components of west and central Africa, in which it is stewed, boiled or roasted. Ebola authorities say the pathogen’s suspected origin – or reservoir host, as it is recognized – is forest bats, a common ingredient of bushmeat. Photograph: Thierry Gouegnon/Reuters
A Liberian student reads newpaper headlines on the Ebola epidemic, Monrovia, Liberia
A student in Monrovia examines newspaper headlines on the Ebola epidemic. Liberia has announced 7 suspected and confirmed cases of the virus, such as 4 deaths. Outbreaks occur largely in remote villages shut to tropical rainforests, according to the World Overall health Organisation. Photograph: Ahmed Jallanzo/EPA
Guinea-Conakry is being ravaged by an Ebola virus epidemic, and the Guinean-Bissau officials are concerned with a possible case inside their borders.
A soldier from Guinea-Bissau instructs girls in Conakry, Guinea, on how to wash their hands with neighborhood disinfectants. Bissau-Guinean officials have raised concerns about a possible case of Ebola. A lot of west African states have porous borders, and individuals often travel in between nations. Photograph: Tiago Petinga/EPA
A Senegalese hygienist demonstrates how to protect oneself against the Ebola virus at Dakar airport, during a visit of the Senegalese health minister to check the safety measures put in place to fight against the virus
A hygienist at Dakar airport exhibits personnel how to avoid infection. Senegal has closed its borders with Guinea as west Africa races to incorporate the Ebola outbreak, described as the most tough since the virus was found practically forty years ago. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Photos













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Ebola experts in west Africa battle to stem deadly outbreak in photographs

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