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HomeThe Health Report@theIRC calls for increased effort in fighting ebola in the DRC

@theIRC calls for increased effort in fighting ebola in the DRC

NEW YORK, United States of America. Over 1600 cases, over 1000 deaths have now been recorded; The April number alone (406 cases) would be the fourth largest outbreak in history.

The ongoing Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has killed 1,074 people. In total 1,604 have been infected with the disease. International Rescue Committee (IRC) teams believe that the numbers are rising and the outbreak is not yet under control. Recent violence that has targeted Ebola-related facilities – including three IRC triages at health centers which were recently burned down – has once again led to the halt in certain programming, further hampering efforts to quash this outbreak.

More than nine months into the crisis, the IRC believes it is time for a reset. The IRC’s President and CEO, David Miliband, has been in Goma meeting teams combating the disease. Travel to Katwa and Butembo was impossible due to the ongoing insecurity, which has forced IRC staff to significantly scale down work in the area.

David Miliband, IRC’s President and CEO said:

This Ebola outbreak, taking place in an area of active conflict with widespread poverty and deep political divisions, is an unprecedented challenge for the government and people of DRC, and for the international community. The situation is far more dangerous than the statistic of 1000 deaths, itself the second largest in history, suggests, and the suspension of key services threatens to create a lethal inflection point in the trajectory of the disease. The danger is that the number of cases spirals out of control, despite a proven vaccine and treatment.

Miliband has raised concerns that fighting in some parts of the country has disrupted treatment and administration of vaccine needed for treatment of the disease.

This disruption in programming is the longest yet and our teams are concerned that this will lead to a surge in the number of cases. Interruptions in the vaccination and other vital activities mean that cases are less likely to be detected, isolated and treated early, which is critical to saving their lives, and to identifying and tracing contacts who need to be given the vaccine.

The Ebola vaccine has not only been shown to be 97.5% effective against Ebola but it also appears to significantly reduce the severity of Ebola disease.

For IRC and other organs involved in curbing the spread of the disease in the DRC, It is vital that this work continues to stop this outbreak and save lives.

The IRC’s Milliband said he has been speaking to doctors who warned that this outbreak could last for another year.

For the people of Congo, who already have endured decades of violence and crisis, and beaten back other outbreaks of Ebola, this outbreak is the last thing they need.

According to the IRC figures, the current outbreak is impacting women more than men with 55% of cases being female. According to the IRC women and girls they spoke to, attributed their high risk of contracting the diseases to them being the primary caretakers of the sick.

We look forward to discussing with all those involved in the Ebola response the necessary steps to achieve greater trust, coordination and impact. We know affected communities are key to the success of the response, and their trust needs to be earned. The international system needs each part of the response – UN, donors, NGOs – to play to their strengths.

David Miliband

The IRC has been working in 59 health clinics in the Butembo, Beni and Goma areas, training health workers to recognize symptoms and safely triage and transfer suspected Ebola patients to treatment centers; as well as working in women’s and children’s protection and community prevention and outreach.

Whilst much of this work has been suspended in the Butembo area, IRC continues to support several hundred staff from the Ministry of Health who work at triage posts, and is providing the delivery of vital supplies, including kits to keep health workers safe.

With more than 13 million people in need of aid, DRC is one of the world’s most complex, chronic and long-standing humanitarian crises. The IRC has been working in the Democratic Republic of Congo since 1996 responding to the humanitarian crisis in the east. It has since evolved into one of the largest providers of humanitarian assistance and post-conflict development, with life-saving programming in health, economic recovery, women’s and children protection, and livelihoods, including more than three years working on health and women’s protection issues in the Beni and Butembo areas where we continue to support the community with work beyond the Ebola response.

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