UN Says Ebola Death Toll Rising To 4,500 This Week

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Tallmadge police cordon off a home in Tallmadge, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2014, where Amber Joy Vinson stayed over the weekend before flying home to Dallas. Vinson, a nurse who helped care for Thomas Eric Duncan, has also been diagnosed with the Ebola virus. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

GENEVA (AP) — The death toll from the Ebola crisis will rise to more than 4,500 lives this week from among 9,000 people infected by the deadly disease, a top official with the U.N. health agency said Thursday.
Dr. Isabelle Nuttall, director of the World Health Organization’s global capacities, alert and response, said new numbers show the outbreak is still hitting health workers hard, with 2,700 infected and 236 dead, mainly because Ebola victims are most contagious around the time they die.
Nuttall said the focus of the world’s efforts should remain on the three West African countries where the outbreak has been spreading out of control: Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
“Our data shows that cases are doubling every four weeks. The disease is still widespread in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and there is persistent transmission of the virus,” she told a news conference in Geneva.
Although the effects of the crisis are increasingly being felt beyond its epicenter in West Africa, until now two nurses in Dallas and a Madrid nursing assistant are the only ones known to have contracted Ebola outside the hot zone.
Nuttall said cases are growing in Guinea’s capital of Conakry, she said, but problems with data-gathering in Liberia, which has a significant under-reporting of Ebola cases in Monrovia, its capital, make it hard to draw any conclusions there.
It will take months before the outbreak is stopped, she said, but WHO has identified 14 African countries where being prepared and containing Ebola is a top priority. Those countries are Benin, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, South Sudan and Togo.
“They’ve been chosen because either they have land borders with the affected countries … or they have high travel or trade routes,” Nuttall said.

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