WHO |
The World Health Organization (WHO) is hoping to announce later on this
week that Nigeria and Senegal are free of Ebola after 42 days with no
infections.
The 42 days is the standard period for declaring an outbreak over, twice the maximum 21-day incubation period of the virus.
According to a statement signed by the Director of Information in the
Ministry of Health, Mrs. Ayotunde Adesugba, WHO will soon make the
official declaration after Nigeria successfully curbed the virus which
was imported into the country by Liberia-American, Patrick Sawyer, in
July. The country recorded seven deaths in the process.
However, one of the discoverers of the deadly virus said on Tuesday that
sex could keep the Ebola epidemic alive even after the World Health
Organization (WHO) declares an area free of the disease.
'In a convalescent male, the virus can persist in semen for at least 70
days; one study suggests persistence for more than 90 days,' the WHO
said in an information note on Monday.
'Certainly, the advice has to be for survivors to use a condom, to not
have unprotected se*x, for 90 days,' said Peter Piot, a professor at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a discoverer of
Ebola in 1976.
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