100 in quarantine after Ebola death

Dr Waithira Wanjiru puts on protective gear as she prepares to check on a Ebola patient, on August 17, 2014 at Kailahun District in Sierra Leone. Health officials in Freetown said they had placed a total of 109 people who had been in contact with the student before her death in isolation. PHOTO | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The World Health Organization on Friday confirmed that a 22-year-old woman who died after falling ill near the Guinean border last week had tested positive for the tropical fever.
  • Health officials in Freetown said they had placed a total of 109 people who had been in contact with the student before her death in isolation.

FREETOWN

Sierra Leone’s government Sunday urged the public not to panic as it announced that more than 100 people had been quarantined following a new death from Ebola just as the country seemed to have overcome the epidemic.

The World Health Organization on Friday confirmed that a 22-year-old woman who died after falling ill near the Guinean border last week had tested positive for the tropical fever.

The announcement came a day after west Africa was celebrating the end of the outbreak after Liberia became the last of the three worst-hit countries in the region to be declared Ebola-free.

Sierra Leone had received the all-clear last November, and Guinea in December.

Health officials in Freetown said they had placed a total of 109 people who had been in contact with the student before her death in isolation.

Of those, 28 were considered “high risk” and three contacts had yet to be located, Ishmael Tarawally, the national coordinator of the Office of National Security, said at a press conference.

“We are worried and concerned about this new development but call on the general public not to panic and more than ever before, all Sierra Leoneans must work together to prevent further infection,” he said.

The woman died in the northern Magburaka township in the district of Tonkolili but Tarawally said “active case investigations” were ongoing in all the districts where the victim was known to have recently travelled.

Those include the districts of Kambia, Port Loko, Bombali and Freetown.

“The source of infection and route of transmission is being investigated and the government urges all Sierra Leoneans to continue being vigilant,” Tarawally added.

The country’s chief medical officer, Dr Brima Kargbo, said that when the woman arrived at Magburaka Government Hospital she showed “no signs or symptoms that fitted the case definition of Ebola”.