Monday, October 13, 2014

Ebola is world’s most severe health crisis – WHO By AP (The Philippine Star) | Updated October 14, 2014

Ebola is world’s most severe health crisis – WHO

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President Aquino attends the meeting of the World Health Organization Regional Committee for the Western Pacific where important health issues were tackled at the PICC in Pasay yesterday. With him are Health Secretary Enrique Ona, Leao Talalelie Tuitama, WHO Western Pacific regional director Shin Young-soo and WHO Geneva executive director Ian Smith.  
MANILA, Philippines - The World Health Organization called the Ebola outbreak “the most severe, acute health emergency seen in modern times” but also said yesterday that economic disruptions can be curbed if people are adequately informed to prevent irrational moves to dodge infection.
WHO director-general Margaret Chan, citing World Bank figures, said 90 percent of economic costs of any outbreak “come from irrational and disorganized efforts of the public to avoid infection.”
Staffers of the global health organization “are very well aware that fear of infection has spread around the world much faster than the virus,” Chan said in a statement read out to a regional health conference in Manila yesterday.
“We are seeing, right now, how this virus can disrupt economies and societies around the world,” she said, but added that adequately educating the public was a “good defense strategy” and would allow governments to prevent economic disruptions.
Chan did not specify those steps but praised the Philippines for holding an anti-Ebola summit last week which was joined by government health officials and private sector representatives, warning that the Southeast Asian country was vulnerable due to the large number of Filipinos working abroad.
While bracing for Ebola, health officials should continue to focus on major health threats, including non-communicable diseases, she said.
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Last month, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged leaders in the most affected countries to establish special centers that aim to isolate infected people from non-infected relatives in an effort to stem the spread of Ebola.
Ban has also appealed for international airlines and shipping companies not to suspend services to countries affected by Ebola. Doing so, he said, hinders delivery of humanitarian and medical assistance.
The Ebola epidemic has killed more than 4,000 people, mostly in the West African countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, according to WHO figures published last week.

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