Saturday, November 29, 2014

Graveyards Filling, Hospital Stays Empty



(UK Telegraph) - The British government’s flagship hospital in Sierra Leone is caring for only eleven Ebola victims, it has emerged.
The Department for International Development has put £230million towards helping Sierra Leone fight Ebola, but only 28 people have been treated in the new facility since it opened several weeks ago.
Another hospital a few miles away is having to turn Ebola victims away from its doors, meaning that they return to their homes and risk further infection in the community.
The British response to the Ebola crisis is facing serious criticism locally for its management, and has been called a “complete mess”, by aid workers in Sierra Leone.
Questions have been raised about DFID's decision to hand the management of the new facility in Kerry Town, near the capital of Freetown, to the charity Save the Children.
Sir Edward Garnier, a Conservative MP, said he was concerned about how few Ebola victims were being seen by the medics at Kerry Town.
"What strikes me is that this is not a good use of public money and it is not achieving its aims," he said. "The Connaught hospital in Freetown is overflowing and turning people away, back into the community, although they are infected with Ebola. This hospital has 92 beds, and they are almost all empty. It seems to be going very slowly."
DFID and Save The Children insisted that the plan had always been to scale up the new facility over time, despite the urgent demands by the World Health Organisation that there was an immediate response to the Ebola crisis.
 The Kerry Town complex includes an 80 bed treatment centre and a 12 bed centre staffed by British Army medics specifically for health care workers and international staff responding to the Ebola crisis. However, dozens of beds are lying empty. 
The construction of the treatment facility was overseen by British Army Royal Engineers.
The site also hosts an Ebola testing laboratory run by British scientists to accurately diagnose patients.
The £230 million Ebola response package from Britain includes funding for supplies such as chlorine and protective clothing, burial teams to increase capacity and work with communities on new burial practices. The roll out of community care centres is also planned.
"Britain is today providing 211 Ebola beds in facilities that the UK has built, expanded or kept open - including 23 beds rolled out so far at Kerry Town - and 232 beds and places in community care centres where Ebola sufferers are going for initial care and diagnosis,” said a DFID spokesman.
"Save The Children, a major global NGO which includes the international health charity Merlin, was available and keen to take on the management of Kerry Town at a time when other NGOs were stretched and unable to do so."
A spokesman for Save The Children said:  In answer to questions about patients, I can confirm that as of this morning, 28 people have been treated for Ebola at the [centre]. This is a cumulative figure of those treated since opening."

I got nothing. There's no attempt to explain this, or make any sense of it, because it's simply insane.
But with 100 cases a day popping up in Sierra Leone, this should keep those burial teams busy well into the new year.

5 comments:

  1. If you actually treat patients, you could catch it yourself.....


    No one wants THAT!

    nick

    BTW, thanks for keeping up the fight. I check here several times a day and look forward to the posts.

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  2. What amazes me is what a desert this is during the week, and how miraculously come Friday night/Saturday morning, there are half a dozen fresh stories.

    Czar Klain, on the case.

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  3. I think they consider "Friday night/Saturday morning" the graveyard for news.

    The Cuban doctor is improving while the Italian doctor has taken a turn for the worse.

    "The 50-year-old infectious diseases medic - who has not been publicly identified - was repatriated on Tuesday from Sierra Leone with a fever and given an experimental drug to try to combat the often-deadly virus.

    But since Friday there has been a 'progressive aggravation' of the man's condition, the Lazzaro Spallanzani Institute treating him said in a statement.

    'He has started to have gastro-intestinal problems (nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea). He has a high fever, currently over 39 degrees Celsius,' it said.

    The doctor - who became the first Italian to be infected with Ebola while working for an Italian medical association fighting the epidemic in Africa - was not showing signs of bleeding at this stage, however."

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  4. From what I read, bleeding seems to be a very rare symptom with Ebola. It was reported in prior outbreaks, but even in the few cases reported in 1976 bleeding only occurred 17% of the time. Mostly the reported symptoms are nausea, vomiting, and fever. Just like gastroenteritis.

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  5. Imagine somebody with nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea in every bed of that pretty white tent. Maybe they need to think outside the box (tent) on how to isolate and treat the infected. I'd rather die in the street than a shit-filled vomit tent.



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