Ebola
patient Beatrice Yardolo, center, surrounded by Chinese military health
workers, as she leaves a Chinese Ebola treatment center in Monrovia, Liberia,
on Thursday.
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Liberia released its last Ebola
patient, a 58-year old teacher, from a treatment center in the capital on
Thursday, beginning its countdown to being declared Ebola free.
"I am one of the happiest human beings today on earth because it was
not easy going through this situation and coming out alive," Beatrice
Yardolo told The Associated Press after her release. She kept thanking God and
the health workers at the center.
Yardolo said she had been admitted to the Chinese-run Ebola
treatment center in the Paynesville district of Monrovia on Feb. 18. A mother
of five; she is originally from the northeastern county of Nimba near the
borders with Guinea and Ivory Coast, but lives in Monrovia where she teaches at
a church-run school. The St. Paul's Bridge community where she resides and
teaches had become the last "hotspot" for Ebola cases in Monrovia,
according to Tolbert Nyenswah, Assistant Health Minister and head of the
country's Ebola response.
There are no other confirmed cases of Ebola in the country, and as such Liberia
can begin to count up to 42 days to be declared Ebola free in keeping with
World Health Organization protocols and standards, Nyenswah said Wednesday.
He
challenged all Liberians to commit themselves to achieving "zero Ebola
infections" by rigidly abiding by the anti-Ebola regulations.
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has said no country can be declared Ebola free until all the other countries have no cases.
Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea
have been hardest hit in the yearlong Ebola outbreak, which is estimated to
have left more than 9,800 people dead.
The WHO on Wednesday reported 132
new Ebola cases last week, an increase from the 99 cases reported the previous
week. The agency said the spread of Ebola remains "widespread" in
Sierra Leone and noted that cases have jumped both there and in Guinea.
Nine new cases were reported in a
24-hour period, according to an update from the Sierra Leone government on
Tuesday.
WHO said only about half of new
Ebola patients in Guinea are connected to known cases, meaning that health
officials are unable to track where the disease is spreading in the other half
of cases.
The U.N. health agency has said it
will start large-scale testing of an experimental Ebola vaccine in Guinea on
Saturday to see how effective it might be in preventing future outbreaks of the
deadly virus.
The health agency's vaccination
strategy in Guinea aims to create a buffer zone around an Ebola case to prevent
its further spread. Officials will vaccinate people who have already been
exposed to Ebola cases and are at risk of developing the disease.
The vaccine being tested — VSV-EBOV
— was developed by Canada and is now licensed to Merck. A second vaccine — one
developed by U.S. National Institutes of Health and GlaxoSmithKline — will be
tested in a separate study as supplies become available.
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