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Ebola is one of the world’s most deadly viruses but is not airborne, so cannot be caught like flu. Medics say avoiding it should be quite easy if you follow these top tips:

One of the most deadly diseases
One of the most deadly diseases

Here are the tips to avoid its contamination:

1. Soap and water

Hand washing with clean and enough water is the first tip
Hand washing with clean and enough water is the first tip

Wash your hands regularly with soap and clean water – and use clean towels to dry them. This can be difficult in slum and rural areas where there is not always direct access to clean water – but it is an effective way to kill the virus. Ordinary soap is all that’s needed.

Shaking hands should also generally be avoided, Dr Unnis Krishnan of Plan International told BBC Africa, because Ebola spreads quickly when people come into contact with an infected person’s body fluids and symptoms take can take a while to show. Other forms of greeting are being encouraged, he says.

2. No touching

Avoid touching other people's bodies during the time when the disease is declared in the neighborhood
Avoid touching other people’s bodies during the time when the disease is declared in the neighborhood

So if you suspect someone of having Ebola, do not touch them. This may seem cruel when you see a loved one in pain and you want to hug and nurse them, but body fluids – urine and stools, vomit, blood, nasal mucus, saliva, tears, sperm and vaginal secretion – can all pass on the virus.

An infected person’s symptoms include fever, muscle and joint pain, sore throat, headache and fatigue – followed by nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, which may include blood.

Encourage them to seek help from a medical professional or health centre as soon as possible. It is also advisable not to touch the clothes or bedclothes of Ebola patients – and Medecins Sans Frontieres advises that such sheets and even mattresses be burnt.

3. Avoid dead bodies

Dead bodies transmit the EVD quickly
Dead bodies transmit the EVD quickly

If you think someone has died from Ebola, do not touch their body, even as part of a burial ceremony. When someone has died, you can still catch Ebola from their body as it ejects fluids that make it even more contagious than that of a sick person.

Organise for a specialised team to deal with the body as quickly as possible as it is risky to leave a dead body for any length of time in a cramped living area.

4. No bushmeat

Don't eat bushmeat
Don’t eat bushmeat

Avoid hunting, touching and eating bushmeat such as bats, monkeys and chimpanzees, as scientists believe this is how the virus was first transmitted to humans.

Even if a certain wild animal is a delicacy in your region, avoid it as its meat or blood may be contaminated. Make sure all food is cooked properly.

Rumors spread fear and panic. This creates a condusivee psychological conditions for the Ebola to spread
Rumors spread fear and panic. This creates  psychological conditions for the Ebola to spread

5. Don’t panic

Spreading rumours increases fear. Do not be scared of health workers – they are there to help and a clinic is the best place for a person to recover – they will be rehydrated and receive pain relief.

About half of the people infected in the current outbreak have died. There have been cases of medics being attacked and people being abandoned when they are suspected of having Ebola – even when they are suffering from something else.

A belief in irrational traditional remedies has also exacerbated the spread of the virus.

“Prevention is the best way to deal with Ebola, so stop rumours and do not panic; it is possible to reduce the suffering and save lives,” Dr Krishnan says.

Ebola Virus Disease (EVD):

  • Symptoms include high fever, bleeding and central nervous system damage
  • Fatality rate can reach 90% – but current outbreak has mortality rate of about 55%
  • Incubation period is two to 21 days
  • There is no vaccine or cure
  • Supportive care such as rehydrating patients who have diarrhoea and vomiting can help recovery
  • Fruit bats, a delicacy for some West Africans, are considered to be virus’s natural host

BBC  

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