The development comes after Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma said that only two people were being treated for Ebola nationwide.
The Ebola epidemic in West Africa has claimed around 11,300 lives. More than 99% of these infections occurred in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. In the face of the epidemic beginning to recede, the World Health Organization (WHO) has revealed that Sierra Leone has not recorded a new case of Ebola in the last week, a first since the outbreak reached the country in March 2014. Anders Nordstrom, the WHO representative in the west African country, said, "This is very good news but we have to keep doing this intensive working with communities to identify potential new cases." The development comes after Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma said, "Only two people were being treated for Ebola nationwide."
The WHO said, "Health officials in the country were now only tracking one transmission chain of the virus, a significant development as such tracking takes substantial manpower and resources. When a patient is confirmed to have Ebola, health workers compile a list of everyone the patient has come in contact with, visiting those contacts as frequently as possible for 21 days to see if they develop symptoms."
Local health officials said, "At the weekend that only 86 people in Sierra Leone were in quarantine nationwide."
Source-AFP