A
second leading Sierra Leone doctor has succumbed to the Ebola epidemic sweeping
across West Africa, dealing another blow to the country’s faltering efforts to
stem the disease.
Dr.
Modupeh Cole, 56, died Wednesday at the Ebola treatment center operated by
Doctors without Borders in the northeastern town of Kailahun, officials at the
health ministry said.
He
had apparently been infected while seeing a patient at the country’s leading
hospital, Connaught Hospital, here in the capital, officials said. The patient
later tested positive for Ebola.
The
loss of Dr. Cole was described as significant by health officials in a country
with a severe shortage of well-trained doctors, especially coming two weeks
after the death of Dr. Sheik Humarr Khan, the virologist who was leading the
fight against the disease in Eastern Sierra Leone, where it has flourished.
Dr.
Cole “was a highly qualified physician, and we have very few of them on hand,”
said Dr. Amara Jambai, director of prevention and control at the health
ministry. “You can imagine what this does to the younger cohort. It’s like
having a general falling in battle. It just brings more misery. It’s not good.
When you have a health system that’s constrained, it’s a bit too much.”
Connaught,
where Dr. Cole worked, is Sierra Leone’s leading referral hospital, so Ebola
patients inevitably go there, initially at least. But it does not have a
treatment center for them or an isolation ward.
It
was one such patient who apparently passed the deadly disease to the doctor.
“He was trying to see a patient, and the patient was falling,” Dr. Jambai said.
“The patient was trying to help himself to the couch, and the patient fell.”
The patient was positive for Ebola, he added.
Dr.
Cole trained in the Soviet Union in the 1980s before returning to Sierra Leone
in 1987, Dr. Jambai said.
The
disease continues to spread, with the World Health Organization reporting 1,013
deaths across four countries — Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone — as
of Saturday. Sierra Leone reported the most confirmed and probable cases, 730,
and the third-highest death toll, 315. Health workers suspect that this figure
may be far too low, given the number of confirmed Ebola cases in the country,
656.
On
Tuesday, some of the rare experimental Ebola drug known as ZMapp arrived in
Liberia. The minister of foreign affairs, Augustine Ngafuan, transported three
courses of the drug himself on a commercial flight from the United States. The
Liberian government had announced that two courses would be administered to two
doctors from John F. Kennedy Medical Center in Monrovia, the Liberian capital.
But
Dr. Moses Massaquoi, a health ministry official, said in a telephone interview
that “things have changed,” adding that the medication would be administered to
health workers, among them a doctor and a nurse, without specifying. Health
officials also emphasized that the very limited courses of the medication,
which is unproven and virtually untested, were not a panacea.
“For me this is not the answer; it’s just a
matter of trial,” said Tolbert Nyenswah, the assistant minister of health. “We
need to continue mechanisms to break transmission so that we can eradicate this
disease.”
A
third death in Nigeria was reported by the Economic Community of West African
States, a regional bloc, which said Tuesday that Jatto Asihu Abdulqudir, a
staff member in Lagos, had succumbed to the disease. Mr. Abdulqudir was among
those who assisted an infected Liberian-American who had arrived by plane for a
conference in July. The passenger, Patrick Sawyer, died on July 25, and a nurse
who treated him died shortly after.
Nigerian
media reported Wednesday that officials were concerned about the spread of the
disease beyond Lagos, with 21 people being placed under quarantine in the
southeastern city of Enugu. They were reported to have had contact with a nurse
who treated Mr. Sawyer.
In
Nigeria, the outbreak still appears relatively contained, with 10 confirmed
cases and 198 people being watched in Lagos and Enugu, according to Liberian
media reports. In Sierra Leone, by contrast, a substantial portion of the
nation is under quarantine by the government, and the number of cases, and
deaths, keeps growing.
“When figures have a
name, that is where reality sinks in,” Dr. Jambai said. “It’s a very sad day.”
Source: The New York Times
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