Scary scene when Ebola virus spread through the air

Painful deaths because of Ebola will rise a million times, horrors spread everywhere . in the event that the virus causes the disease to spread in the air.

>>>Discuss the infection through the air of Ebola virus

At the recent international conference on Ebola, the head of the United Nations' anti-epidemic agency warned that the virus is at higher risk of transmission and spread through the air if the epidemic continues. Mr. Anthony Banbury, Secretary General of the agency responsible for Ebola specifically stressed that the deadly respiratory disease is a terrible prospect but cannot be eliminated.

"The more time there is transmission in human hosts in the epidemic, the current West Africa, the higher the likelihood of a virus variant ," Anthony said. He admits the international community has been slow to respond to the worst epidemic disaster he has ever witnessed.

The comment was made at the same time that international organizations are trying to fight the Ebola crisis in West Africa, warning that the world community only has 4 more weeks to prevent the virus from spreading before the translation is completely over control. Health workers in the epicenter are racing against time in the absence of multifaceted equipment and fear of virus variants and spread through the air.

Picture 1 of Scary scene when Ebola virus spread through the air
Anthony Banbury warned of the risk of Ebola spreading through the air after the variant.(Photo: Onenewspage)

At the conference, 29-year-old nurse Will Pooley said the "horrors and pain" when he saw children dying because of dangerous epidemics. He stressed that this situation must end 'at all costs' . Pooley was the first Briton to be infected with Ebola and was successfully treated with ZMapp. He urgently urged governments to do all they can to prevent Ebola from robbing many children.

'My fear is the terror and pain of those deaths. I don't know what will happen if this happens a million times, so at any cost, we have to stop that , 'Pooley said, remembering the deaths of young victims. he took care during his time in aid in Sierra Leone.

He and Sierra Leone are implementing a plan to provide a kind of temporary clinic to help slow the current rate of Ebola outbreaks. These clinics will provide some necessary treatment, if any, but mainly to take patients out of their homes, away from their families, thereby hoping to reduce the rate of infection.

Sierra Leone is one of the countries that suffered heavily for Ebola, along with Guinea and Liberia. Save the Children warns that every hour the country has five new cases but only a small number of patients are cared for at health centers. Experts are concerned that the disease will continue to spread unless at least 70% of patients are isolated to prevent spreading the disease to others. Many care centers are being promised to use, but it may take several weeks or months.

To date, WHO estimates that more than 3,300 people have died out of more than 7,000 cases, making the current outbreak the worst Ebola pandemic in history.

Recently, the first case of Ebola infection outside Africa has been recorded in the United States. The patient was an unnamed American man from Liberia to visit his family, who was in critical isolation at a Dallas hospital in Texas. The US medical community is believed to be reviewing and monitoring more than 100 people who have been in contact with patients to monitor disease symptoms, of which 5 are children.

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