A woman, wearing a protective face mask and gloves, speaks to a worker upon arrival at the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos on August 11, 2014. Cameroon closed all its land, sea and air borders with Nigeria in a move to help prevent the spread of the Ebola virus on August 18, 2014. AFP PHOTO | PIUS UTOMI EKPEI | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The Ebola outbreak in Guinea, Sierra
Leone and Liberia is so out of control that governments have resorted to
approaches similar to the medieval-era disease control approach last
used in 1918: the “cordon sanitaire” whereby no one is allowed out of a
barricade established around an infected area.
According
to the World Health Organisation, the epidemic that began in Guinea in
December 2013 has now become the largest, most severe and most complex
outbreak of the Ebola virus disease in history and has so far resulted
in more than 1,800 clinical cases and 1,000 deaths.
The
situation has been described as a “state of war” by American virologist
and special adviser to Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Health, Mr Joseph
Fair. The affected governments appear to be unable to contain it.
Similarly,
the WHO, which declared the epidemic a “public health emergency of
international concern”, its highest level of alert on August 8, seems
resigned to the tragedy. For instance, whereas “cordon sanitaire” is
considered a brutal, inhumane and desperate intervention whereby
everyone within the cordon is left to die or survive until the outbreak
has ended, WHO has not opposed it.
Additionally,
Dr Margaret Chan, WHO’s director-general, said at a news conference in
Geneva on August 8 that the UN health agency was “extremely stretched”
in its capacity to deal with the outbreak. This desperate situation begs
two questions: why is Ebola so deadly and why isn’t there a cure or
vaccine for it?
SPORADIC NATURE
Ebola
is one of the most deadly diseases known to man and has a case fatality
rate of up to 90 per cent. One of the main reasons is that, like HIV,
but faster, the virus shuts down the human immune response to
infections.
The virus carries a protein that has been
called “VP24” that disrupts normal immune responses to infections. This
protein disables some of the most useful machineries that our bodies
have for fighting viral infections and leaves the body with only crude
defences. The virus is thus left free to replicate, eventually leading
to death.
The lack of any licensed treatment or vaccine
against Ebola is attributable to many factors, key among them the
sporadic nature of the disease which has raised little interest on the
part of pharmaceutical companies to invest in developing treatments or
vaccines.
With
the exception of the current outbreak, all previous outbreaks dating
back to the first one in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1976 have
been in sparsely populated areas and have “burned themselves out”.
In this regard, there has not been a market, as it were, for therapies and vaccines against Ebola.
This
factor is further compounded by the fact that developing therapies for
human diseases is time-consuming and expensive. For instance, according
to E&K Health Consulting’s analysis, innovating and bringing a new
therapy or vaccine to the public market typically takes an average of
ten to 15 years and costs approximately $1 billion.
REACTIVE GOIVERNMENTS
Further,
there has not been significant investment into biomedical research
(including research into potential therapies for Ebola) by African
governments.
Notably, despite the fact that all 20
Ebola outbreaks in history have been in Africa, they have been resolved
by the same approach: teams of foreign health specialists fly in,
recruit local health workers and set up field hospitals where Ebola
victims are quarantined.
African governments have so
far been reactive rather than proactive – and since most of them have
more elaborate armies than healthcare systems, armies are often deployed
to cordon off infected areas.
African governments can
borrow the lessons they have learnt through addressing famine, key
among them being that the shot-gun approach of reactively addressing and
moving from one famine to another is unsustainable and that long-term
proactive approaches are better.
The Ebola outbreak
is, therefore, a wake-up call for African governments to focus attention
on biomedical research and long-term improvement of health system
infrastructures.
Dr Rono is co-founder and lead health consultant, E&K Health (josea.rono@gmail.com) Twitter: @Dr_Josea_Rono
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