By Terri Moon Cronk and Cheryl Pellerin
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1, 2014 – Defense Department personnel are
on the ground in West Africa and in U.S. laboratories fighting to control the
worst outbreak in the African history of the Ebola virus, which a senior Army
infectious disease doctor called a “scourge of mankind.”
Army Col. (Dr.) James Cummings, director of the Global
Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System, or GEIS, a division of
the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center, said the battle against the virus
since the outbreak began in West Africa in March focuses on trying to stop
disease transmission.
At the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control, or CDC,
in Atlanta, Director Dr. Tom Frieden has announced that the health agency has
raised the travel advisory to Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone where he said
the Ebola outbreak is worsening, to Level 3 -- a warning to avoid unnecessary
travel to those countries.
CDC already has disease detectives and other staff in those
countries to track the epidemic, advise embassies, coordinate with the World
Health Organization, or WHO, strengthen ministries of health, and improve case
finding, contact tracing, infection control and health communication.
Over the next 30 days, in what Frieden described as a surge,
CDC will send another 50 disease-control specialists into the three countries
to help establish emergency operations centers and develop structured ways to
address the outbreak.
“They will also help strengthen laboratory networks so
testing for the disease can be done rapidly,” the director said.
For travelers in and out of the three West African
countries, CDC experts will strengthen country capacity to monitor those who
may have been exposed to Ebola, and each country in the region has committed to
doing this, Frieden said.
“It's not easy to do,” he added, “but we will have experts
from our division that do airport screening and try to ensure that people who
shouldn't be traveling aren't traveling.”
Frieden said CDC has spoken with air carriers that service
the West African region.
“We understand they will continue to fly, which is very
important to continue to support the response and maintain essential functions
in the country,” he explained.
CDC gives information to travelers to the region and health
care providers in the United States who might care for people returning from
the infected area. Frieden said that includes medical consultation and testing
for patients who may have Ebola.
Frieden said that in the United States, “we are confident
that we will not have significant spread of Ebola, even if we were to have a
patient with Ebola here. We work actively to educate American health care
workers on how to isolate patients and how to protect themselves against
infection.”
In fact, he added, “any advanced hospital in the U.S., any
hospital with an intensive care unit has the capacity to isolate patients.
There is nothing particularly special about the isolation of an Ebola patient,
other than it's really important to do it right. So ensuring that there is
meticulous care of patients with suspected or … confirmed Ebola is what's
critically important.”
The Ebola virus has no known cure and up to a 90 percent
fatality rate and only supportive care can be offered to patients diagnosed
with the disease while researchers work to find a vaccine.
DoD researchers think the viral disease originated in rural
populations that prepare and eat meat from Ebola-carrying gorillas and monkeys.
The virus is passed among animals or people through body
fluids. Only a person who is infected and is showing signs of illness can pass
the disease to others.
Health care workers and home caretakers who have direct
patient contact and those who prepare bodies for burial also are at risk, the
infectious disease doctor said.
“We had a large footprint in Africa,” Cummings said of DoD’s
response to the first Ebola cases reported in 1976 in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, formerly Zaire. Since that time, DoD has answered numerous calls
for assistance from WHO, nongovernmental organizations and ministries of heath
and defense, he explained.
DoD personnel provide a wide array of support to the
Ebola-stricken African nations, from logistical help to guides for clinical
management of the virus, Cummings said.
“DoD personnel bring a level of excellence second to none,
working in response to host nations and WHO in the most-affected countries of
Sierra Leone and Liberia,” he said.
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