Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Ebola mobile laboratory team heads back to Sierra Leone

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Sep, 2014 10:46 PM
  • Canadian Ebola mobile laboratory team heads back to Sierra Leone
TORONTO - Canada is sending its mobile Ebola laboratory back into action in Sierra Leone.
 
The Public Health Agency of Canada says the team left on Saturday to resume running a lab that supports an Ebola treatment centre in Sierra Leone.
 
Canada has had a continuous laboratory presence in the West African outbreak zone since June, with three-person teams typically spending a month in operation before being spelled off.
 
But the most recent team was abruptly evacuated from Sierra Leone late last month when three people at the hotel complex where they were staying were diagnosed with Ebola.
 
It is believed the infected people were hotel staff.
 
As well, an epidemiologist from Senegal who was working in a different part of the same unit and staying in the same hotel contracted Ebola.
 
The man was later sent by air ambulance to Germany for treatment.
 
At the time, the Public Health Agency said the lab workers were being brought home for their own safety. But the agency said a replacement team would be sent to Sierra Leone when arrangements were made to ensure a safer living environment.
 
There was no immediate indication if the new team would be heading back to the same location — Kailahun in eastern Sierra Leone, near the borders of Guinea and Liberia.
 
Those three countries are struggling to cope with the largest Ebola outbreak in known history, which has seen roughly 3,700 infections and an estimated 1,850 deaths. Those figures are larger than the combine totals of all previous known outbreaks of Ebola.
 
The team had been supporting a Medecins Sans Frontieres treatment centre at Kailahun.
 
The World Health Organization warned Friday that at the current rate of spread, it expects to see cases increase by thousands of new infections a week in coming weeks, an unprecedented event with this disease.

MORE National ARTICLES

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

$50-million Lotto Max jackpot won by Ontario ticketholder

$50-million Lotto Max jackpot won by Ontario ticketholder
TORONTO - There is one winning ticket for the $50-million jackpot in Friday night’s Lotto Max draw. The ticket was sold somewhere in Ontario.

$50-million Lotto Max jackpot won by Ontario ticketholder

Alberta Progressive Conservatives finishing voting among 3 candidates to pick new leader and premier

Alberta Progressive Conservatives finishing voting among 3 candidates to pick new leader and premier
EDMONTON - Members of Alberta's PC party are voting today for a new leader and premier. Ric McIver, Thomas Lukaszuk and Jim Prentice will continue trying today to get out the vote by phone, online or in person.

Alberta Progressive Conservatives finishing voting among 3 candidates to pick new leader and premier

Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution

Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution
QUEBEC - Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard took advantage of a public appearance with Prime Minister Stephen Harper to reiterate his wish for the province to sign the Constitution.

Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution

Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy

Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy
IRBIL, Iraq - Moments after climbing into a bunker manned by Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird looked behind him and gestured, saying, "Paul and Marc, come on."

Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy

Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display

Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display
TORONTO - The possible use of corpses from executed Chinese prisoners for a public display as part of an exhibition in Ontario merits a criminal and coroner's investigation, a human-rights group is asserting.

Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display

PrevNext