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Here in the UK, covid is surging again. Over in Uganda they’ve introduced their first Ebola lockdown, a 21 day restricted period designed to cope with an ongoing outbreak of the virus.
In a world where governments seem to have forgotten about the risks to our health, wellbeing and finances, it makes sense to act to protect our own interests. Did you know our UVC steriliser units kill the Ebola virus just as effectively as they kill covid? It’s good to know when the world is at constant risk of entirely new viruses, and new variants and sub-variants of existing diseases.
Do you remember the Ebola case we had in the UK?
In late 2014 a Scottish aid worker returned home from Sierra Leone. She was diagnosed with Ebola after working at an Ebola treatment centre. She probably caught it because she wore a visor instead of goggles at work. Contact tracing took place for her fellow passengers on the flight. She became critically ill and was given intensive treatment. Eventually declared free of infection, she survived. It was a lesson to us all. And then came covid...
About Ebola
Ebola is a viral hemorrhagic fever. The symptoms begin two days and three weeks after being infected, usually kicking off with a fever, sore throat, muscle pain, and headaches followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, a rash, damaged liver and kidney function then, in some people, external and internal bleeding. It kills 25% and 90% of patients, an average of 50%, and death usually happens 6-16 days after the first symptoms turn up.
Uganda’s Ebola outbreak
Uganda’s 21 day lockdown affects the Mubende and Kassanda districts. On 19th October the country’s Ministry of Health reported 60 confirmed cases and 24 confirmed deaths. A WHO report reveals much the same. The first Ebola death, on 19th September, was 24 year-old man from Mubende. Six members of his family later died of Ebola.
Like most viruses, including covid, the four different strains that create the common cold, and the flu virus, there’s more than one Ebola variant. In this case it’s the Sudan variant. Previous outbreaks killed anything from 41 – 100% of people who caught it.
No vaccine for the Sudan variant of Ebola
While there are two vaccines for the Zaire variant, the WHO said it doesn’t think one of the available vaccines will kill the Sudan variant and the other, from Johnson & Johnson, hasn’t been tested on humans yet. It’s also problematic since the second dose has to take place at least 56 days after the first one, so it’s not suitable as an ‘emergency response’ vaccine.
Five healthcare workers have died in the Uganda outbreak so far. PPE is in short supply. The situation could get worse in rural areas of Uganda where healthcare isn’t readily available. At the moment they’re tracing and isolating contacts of people who test positive. The contact tracers who have phones – and that isn’t all of them - don’t always have the money or mobile data to contact potentially-infected people. And poverty means it’s hard to tell people to stay home when their only income is from their work.
Are vaccines being developed for Sudan Ebola?
There are at least six different vaccines being developed against the Sudan variant of Ebola. One, which comes from the same team who developed the Oxford/AstraZeneca covid vaccine, is in production right now, lined up for a clinical trial and due to be sent to Uganda within the next couple of weeks. The USA has already sent an experimental Ebola antibody drug to help protect healthcare workers.
Protect everyone from Ebola, covid, flu, the common cold and much more
Our highly effective covid killing purification lights and mobile sterilisers are affordable. They’re cheap to run because they use LED bulbs. They kill covid, flu virus, common cold viruses, Ebola, SARS, MERS, and more, and they do it quickly and efficiently as well as safely.
When you want to carry on working, carry on producing, carry on manufacturing, carry on selling, this is the way to do it as covid sweeps the UK once more. Help protect your employees, keep staffing levels high, and create a competitive advantage.
Let’s just hope Ebola doesn’t make its way here again. If so, our purifiers will kill it. In the meantime, we’ll help you beat covid at your place this winter.