Liberia and Sierra Leone, two of the countries worst affected by the
Ebola outbreak, are now virus-free according to the World Health
Organisation.
On 7 November, Sierra Leone had gone 42 days without
any new cases of Ebola, allowing the World Health Organisation (WHO) to
declare the country free of the virus. It is an important milestone for
the West African country, as the country has recorded 14,089 cases of
the disease since December 2013, almost half of the total that were
reported to have caused the outbreak (28,571).
The announcement
that Sierra Leone is now virus-free, will, therefore, be met with a
mixture of caution and celebration. However, the news is less positive
in neighbouring Guinea, where the virus continues to infect people, with
382 people currently under strict quarantine. Yet, it appears that
there is light at the end of the tunnel and that the epidemic is nearing
its conclusion.
The last 19 months have been tough on Sierra
Leone, after the first signs of an outbreak were recorded in late March
2014 in the region of Kailahun. According to scientists that have
studied the history of this particular epidemic, the first person to
introduce the virus to Sierra Leone was a woman who went to a funeral in
Guinea and was consequently infected.
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