West Africa - Ebola Outbreak - Fact Sheet #12 (FY 15)

Speeches Shim

December 17, 2014

HIGHLIGHTS

Ebola Response

Visit our main West Africa Ebola Outbreak page to learn more about how we're responding to the West Africa Ebola outbreak, and what you can do to help.

  • On December 11, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Spain discharged the last confirmed EVD patient in Mali.
  • More than 1 million people in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone may experience severe food insecurity due to the EVD outbreak by March 2015—a 100 percent increase compared to December 2014.
  • U.N. Secretary-General (SYG) Ban Ki- moon announced on December 11 the appointment of Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed as the incoming U.N. Special Representative of the SYG (SRSG) and Head of U.N. Mission for Ebola Emergency Response (UNMEER).
  • MSF/Spain discharged the final confirmed EVD case from the EVD treatment unit (ETU) in Mali’s capital city of Bamako on December 11. On December 17, the Government of Mali (GoM) announced the completion of the 21-day incubation period for the final 13 persons who authorities had monitored for EVD symptoms.
  • The number of suspected EVD cases in Sierra Leone continues to rise, especially in Western Area, where the Government of Sierra Leone (GoSL) and relief agencies launched a surge operation on December 17.
  • In Liberia, the number of new EVD cases continues to trend downward. According to the Government of Liberia (GoL), the most pressing clusters are in Bong, Grand Cape Mount, and Sinoe counties.
  • CDC reports that more than 13,000 people have completed infection protection and control (IPC) trainings in EVD-affected countries as of December 17. Additionally, USAID/OFDA recently provided $4 million to WHO to assess quality of care, triage procedures, and IPC measures in EVD facilities in Sierra Leone. Using the assessment results, WHO plans to fill response gaps and work with health care workers to strengthen IPC and triage knowledge.

On December 11, SYG Ban announced the appointment of Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed as the incoming SRSG and Head of UNMEER, succeeding the current SRSG and Head of UNMEER Anthony Banbury in early January.

On December 15, the U.N. Security Council (UNSC) extended the mandate of the U.N. Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) for an additional nine months, through September 2015. The UNSC noted that the EVD outbreak in Liberia has slowed government efforts to advance certain governance and national reform priorities, while emphasizing the need for continued progress on these priorities as part of UNMIL’s mandate.

On December 8, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) member states pledged to deploy more than 190 military medical personnel to the West African countries most affected by the EVD outbreak. Over the next six months, the governments of Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, Senegal, and Togo each plan to contribute eight military personnel—two medical doctors and six other health care staff—for two-month rotations. In total, each ECOWAS state will provide 24 medical personnel to serve on the regional EVD response during the six-month period.

Liberia

The number of new EVD cases continues to trend downward in Liberia, according to the GoL. The most pressing clusters of cases remain in Bong, Grand Cape Mount, and Sinoe counties, while reports of most cases are primarily from seven counties—Bomi, Bong, Grand Bassa, Grand Cape Mount, Margibi, Montserrado, and Sinoe.

An increased number of non-EVD patients are seeking care at ETUs, according to relief organizations. Health actors hypothesize that with an absence of basic health care services, Liberians are increasingly attempting to access basic health services through ETUs, further underscoring the need to restore the country’s health care system.

MSF has established a 15-bed isolation and care facility in Quenwein town, Grand Bassa—an active hot spot with14 confirmed cases between November 20 and December 4, according to CDC. The facility has 10 beds for confirmed cases and five beds for suspected cases. GoL authorities recently identified Quenwein as the most concerning outbreak area countrywide. As of December 10, MSF was treating six confirmed patients and one suspected EVD case.

USAID/OFDA partner Global Communities reports that two hot spot areas in Bong—Bomota and Taylorta neighborhoods—have experienced a reduction in active cases during recent weeks. In conjunction with the U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Global Communities has distributed approximately 4,000 hygiene kits to more than 20 communities in Bong, including Taylorta.

Non-governmental organization (NGO) Mercy Corps, with $12 million in assistance from USAID/OFDA, is supporting EVD social mobilization for affected communities across Liberia. Through USAID/OFDA funding, Mercy Corps partner Women’s Campaign International (WCI) will conduct community awareness promotions in Bong, Gbarpolu, Grand Cape Mount, Margibi, Maryland, Nimba, and River Gee counties. WCI and other implementing partners plan to align their efforts with GoL EVD social mobilization efforts, including the “Ebola Must Go!” campaign—developed by CDC’s Prevention Risk Communication/Health Promotion Team and partners.

During the week of December 8, more than 70 African Union (A.U.) health care workers from Nigeria arrived in Liberia to work on the EVD response as a part of CDC’s A.U. Field Epidemiology Training Program. The training is part of a broader A.U.–CDC collaboration to strengthen county health teams and improve local capacity for epidemiological activities. Up to 30 Nigerian epidemiologists and an additional 60 health workers from Ethiopia are scheduled to arrive in the coming week; the GoL Ministry of Health plans to assign A.U. personnel to support response activities in EVD- affected areas across Liberia.

Between December 12 and 15, CDC staff conducted infection prevention and contact tracing training for A.U. health workers. CDC oriented the health workers to field-level response in Liberia, instructed trainers scheduled to teach IPC in non-ETU settings, and provided an overview of general contact tracing processes.

Sierra Leone

The number of suspected EVD cases continues to rise in Sierra Leone, especially in Western Area. The GoSL and relief organizations launched a Western Area surge operation on December 17. In advance of the surge in EVD operations, relief actors began engaging with local communities though networks of EVD survivors, volunteers, community and religious leaders, and civil society organizations. For instance, USAID/OFDA partner the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) is providing social mobilization support through house-to-house campaigns, community outreach activities, and awareness raising efforts. Additionally, CDC staff provided extensive training to district surveillance officers to improve active surveillance of EVD cases. Together, these efforts allow relief organizations to better identify suspected EVD cases, refer cases to treatment facilities, encourage safe burial practices, and support culturally sensitive interventions.

Relief organizations report that the EVD outbreak and related stigmatization in Sierra Leone has exacerbated vulnerabilities among children, EVD survivors, women, and other vulnerable groups. In response, USAID/OFDA has provided more than $2.9 million in FY 2014 and FY 2015—or nearly 11 percent of total USAID/OFDA assistance to date in Sierra Leone—to support ongoing standalone protection programs through partnerships with International Medical Corps (IMC) and UNICEF.

With USAID/OFDA support, IMC is implementing psychosocial support activities in Port Loko District to mitigate the impact of EVD on families, health care workers, and patients throughout the identification, hospitalization, and release or notification of death and burial process. IMC’s activities emphasize alleviating stress, managing potential stigma, and linking survivors to basic services upon release from treatment facilities.

Throughout Sierra Leone, USAID/OFDA partner UNICEF is enabling survivors to reintegrate into society and become resources for social mobilization efforts in EVD-affected communities. UNICEF is supporting psychosocial services at EVD treatment facilities for approximately 6,000 survivors, coordinating service delivery efforts to ensure basic needs are met for survivors upon release, reuniting separated children with families, restoring livelihoods, and empowering and training survivors to share EVD prevention messages with members of their communities.

In addition to ongoing support for health care services and IPC in Sierra Leone, USAID/OFDA recently provided $4 million to WHO to assess quality of care, triage procedures, and IPC measures in EVD facilities. Using the assessment results, WHO will fill response gaps and work with health care workers to strengthen IPC and triage knowledge at the district and facility levels.

Guinea

While the number of EVD cases in Guinea remains stable, WHO reported 261 new EVD cases between November 28 and December 14. Since late November, reported new EVD cases are concentrated in southwestern and southeastern Guinea—including the capital city of Conakry, as well as Coyah, Macenta, and Nzerekore prefectures.

CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden travelled to Guinea between December 13 and 16 to meet with representatives from the U.S. Embassy in Conakry, the Government of Guinea, implementing partners to the response, CDC, and the National Ebola Coordination Cell.

In early December, CDC and partners trained more than 260 health care workers in infection control practices. Additionally, CDC and NGO Catholic Relief Services (CRS) trained 41 infection prevention specialists who will serve in medical facilities or provide infection prevention supervision at the prefecture level.

UNICEF reported on December 9 that it had finished construction of the centre de transit communautaire (CTComm) in Kouremale town, Siguiri Prefecture. Overall, UNICEF is currently constructing or rehabilitating 10 CTComms across Guinea, with plans to construct 41 CTComms in total through 2015. Once operational, the CTComms will provide isolation while suspected EVD case specimens are tested in a laboratory; health authorities will subsequently transport positive cases to an ETU. Given their long distances from an ETU, four of the 10 CTComms—Kerouane, Kissidougou, Kouroussa, and Lola—will provide patients with intravenous rehydration to provide early supportive care.

Mali

MSF/Spain discharged Mali’s final confirmed EVD case from its ETU in Bamako on December 11; no patients remain at the facility. On December 17, the GoM announced that it has released the final 13 people that contact tracers were monitoring for EVD symptoms.

The GoM is shifting its focus to EVD prevention efforts, such as IPC training, procurement of medical and non-medical equipment for EVD treatment, and logistical support for Mali’s emergency operation center. The GoM and the EVD response community continue to assess prevention needs and other response requirements in Mali given the recent reduction in EVD cases.

Between December 10–11, IFRC and MSF conducted safe and dignified burial trainings in Bamako for 25 Mali Red Cross volunteers. The volunteers returned to their homes in Bamako and Kayes, Koulikoro, and Sikasso regions, and IFRC plans to call them to serve on burial teams as needed. Currently, no IFRC burial teams are needed in Mali for safe burials of EVD cases.

With funding from the CDC Foundation, the CDC and High Islamic Council (HIC)—a consortium of 42 religious leaders from across Mali—conductrf workshops in Bamako during the week of December 10 for approximately 1,000 Bamako-based imams. In the workshops, CDC and HIC presented comprehensive information on EVD, as well as information on how funeral rites and burials for deceased persons with EVD can be safe and in accordance with Islamic law. These workshops followed HIC President Mohamoud Dicko’s safe burial address to an estimated 300 imams on December 1.

To support quality IPC practices and the safety of health care workers, the DoD Logistics Agency provided 36 pallets of personal protective equipment—including 160,000 biohazard bags for medical waste and 560,000 medical gloves—via the USG Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) to the U.N. World Food Program (WFP), a USG partner in the logistics sector, in mid-December.

Approximately 500,000 people in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone are experiencing severe food insecurity due to the EVD outbreak as of December 2014, according to a recent report by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the WFP. Border closures, quarantines, hunting bans, and other restrictions have hindered people’s access to food— threatening livelihoods, disrupting food markets, and exacerbating crop losses. Lost productivity and income due to EVD-related deaths and illness have further exacerbated the economic situation for households across the region.

The report projects that more than 1 million people—including approximately 470,000 people in Guinea; 300,000 people in Liberia; and 280,000 people in Sierra Leone—may experience severe food insecurity due to the EVD outbreak by March 2015.

In response, FAO is providing livelihoods support to approximately 200,000 people in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Recent activities include community campaigns to prevent EVD transmission, expanding savings and loan opportunities, and providing direct financial support for affected communities. Additionally, WFP—with nearly $35 million in USAID/FFP assistance to date—is supporting the basic food and nutrition needs of EVD-affected communities, providing emergency food assistance to more than 2 million people since the inception of the EVD outbreak. WFP is also providing crucial transport and logistics support, particularly to medical partners, and is building Ebola treatments centres and storage hubs for humanitarian interventions.

On December 12, WFP distributed one-month emergency food rations to approximately 1,500 non-quarantined households in Sierra Leone’s city of Waterloo, Western Rural District. During the distribution, WFP piloted a new delivery method that incorporates improved health security for beneficiaries via an incrementally distributed ration card system, which discourages large crowds from gathering. Surveillance teams were active during the distribution to isolate any suspected EVD cases. If successful, WFP plans to expand the new system during surge operations in the Western Area.

  • The most effective way people can assist relief efforts is by making cash contributions to humanitarian organizations that are conducting relief operations. A list of humanitarian organizations that are accepting cash donations for disaster responses around the world can be found at www.interaction.org.
  • USAID encourages cash donations because they allow aid professionals to procure the exact items needed (often in the affected region); reduce the burden on scarce resources (such as transportation routes, staff time, and warehouse space); can be transferred very quickly and without transportation costs; support the economy of the disaster-stricken region; and ensure culturally, dietary, and environmentally appropriate assistance.

More information can be found at:

USAID/OFDA bulletins appear on the USAID website at what-we-do/working-crises-and-conflict/responding-times-crisis/where-we-work