MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) – Liberia’s chief medical officer is placing herself under quarantine for 21 days after her office assistant died of Ebola.
Bernice Dahn, a deputy health minister who has represented Liberia at regional conferences intended to combat the ongoing epidemic, told The Associated Press today that she did not have any Ebola symptoms but wanted to ensure she was not infected.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) says 21 days is the maximum incubation period for Ebola, which has killed more than 3 000 people across West Africa and is hitting Liberia especially hard.
WHO figures released yesterday said 150 people died in the country in just two days.
Liberia’s government has asked people to keep themselves isolated for 21 days if they think they have been exposed. The unprecedented scale of the outbreak, however, has made it difficult to trace the contacts of victims and quarantine those who might be at risk.
“Of course we made the rule, so I am home for 21 days,” Dahn said today. “I did it on my own. I told my office staff to stay at home for the 21 days. That’s what we need to do.”
Health officials, especially front-line doctors and nurses, are particularly vulnerable to Ebola, which is spread via the bodily fluids of infected patients. Earlier this month, WHO said more than 300 health workers had contracted Ebola in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the three most-affected countries. Nearly half of them had died.
Making sure health care workers have the necessary supplies, including personal protective equipment, has been a challenge especially given that many flights in and out of Ebola-affected countries have been cancelled.
At an emergency meeting of the African Union on September 8, regional travel hub Senegal said it was planning to open a “humanitarian corridor” to affected countries.
Senegal was expected to receive a flight carrying humanitarian staff from Guinea today – the first time aid workers from one of the three most-affected countries were allowed in Senegal since the corridor was opened, said Alexis Masciarelli, spokesman for the World Food Programme.