The number of Ebola infections will triple to 20,000 by November, soaring by the thousands every week if efforts are not significantly stepped up to stop the outbreak, the WHO warned today.
“Without drastic improvement in control measures, the numbers of cases and deaths from Ebola are expected to continue increasing from hundreds to thousands per week in the coming months,” the World Health Organization said in a study.
The current outbreak in West Africa has already claimed more than 2,800 lives and infected more than 5,800 people.
But the WHO study forecasts that if no significant action is taken, “the cumulative number of confirmed and probable cases by November 2 ... will be 5,925 in Guinea, 9,939 in Liberia and 5,063 in Sierra Leone’’.
The total for those three countries alone will therefore surpass 20,000 cases, said the study published in the New England Journal of Medicine today.
That would also translate to a jump in the number of deaths as the experts suggest that the fatality in the current outbreak is much higher than the widely estimated one in two.
If only cases of deaths and recovery were taken into account, the fatality rate stands at about 71 per cent, the study showed.
“We are seeing exponential growth and we need to act now,” said Christopher Dye, co-author of the study jointly carried out with the Imperial College in London.
“If we don’t stop the epidemic very soon, this is going to turn from a disaster into a catastrophe,” he told reporters in Geneva, warning that the epidemic might simply “rumble on as it has for the last few months for the next few years’’.
“The fear is that Ebola will become more or less a permanent feature of the human population,” warned Dye, who is the UN health agency’s head of strategy.
Ebola fever causes severe muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhoea and — in many cases — unstoppable internal and external bleeding.
It is one of the deadliest viruses known to man, and the current outbreak, which quietly began in southern Guinea last December, has by far killed more than all other Ebola outbreaks combined.
Prior to the current epidemic, the deadliest outbreak was the very first one on record, in Democratic Republic of Congo in 1976, when 280 people died.