Ebola disease: an international public health emergency

Journal Title: Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Disease - Year 2015, Vol 5, Issue 4

Abstract

Ebola virus disease (EVD), previously known as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, is a severe illness caused by Ebola filovirus, and is often fatal if left untreated. The first case of the current EVD was diagnosed in Guinea in March 2014, and since then it has spread to Sierra Leone, Liberia, Nigeria, and Senegal. The current review has been performed with an objective to explore the magnitude of the current Ebola virus epidemic and identify the multiple determinants that have resulted in the exponential growth of the epidemic. An extensive search of all materials related to the topic was done for almost two months (August-October) in Pubmed, Medline, World Health Organization website and Google Scholar search engines. Relevant documents, reports, recommendations, guidelines and research articles focusing on the different aspects of Ebola virus and its current outbreak, published in the period 2002-2014 were included in the review. Keywords used in the search include Ebola virus, Ebola virus disease, Ebola hemorrhagic fever, Ebola vaccine, and Ebola treatment. The current EVD epidemic has turned out to be extensive, severe, and uncontrollable because of a delayed response and ineffective public health care delivery system. In fact, multiple challenges have also been identified and thus a range of interventions have been proposed to control the epidemic. In conclusion, the 2014 epidemic of EVD has shown to the world that in absence of a strong public health care delivery system even a rare disease can risk the lives of millions of people. The crux of this epidemic is that a large scale and coordinated international response is the need of the hour to support affected and at-risk nations in intensifying their response activities and strengthening of national capacities.

Authors and Affiliations

Keywords

Related Articles

An insight into medicinal and ethnopharmacological potential of Crotalaria burhia

Crotalaria burhia Buch.-Ham. (C. burhia) (Fabaceae), is an undershurb found distributed in arid parts of the world. It extensively grows in Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. It is a highly medicinal plant. The leaves, bra...

Anaplasmosis in farmers and domestic animals in Anhui province, China

Objective: To investigate the epidemiological status of anaplasmosis among farmers and domestic animals in Guangde County where the unusual nosocomial human to human transmission of human granulocytic anaplasmosis occurr...

Comparison of Paracheck Pf襆 test with conventional light microscopy for the diagnosis of malaria in Ethiopia

Objective: To assess the accuracy of Paracheck Pf襆 in reference to the conventional light microscopy. Methods: A total of 400 patients visiting Awash, Methara and Ziway malaria centers were simultaneously screened with...

Investigation on cytotoxic, antioxidant, antimicrobial and volatile profile of Wrightia tinctoria (Roxb.) R. Br. flower used in Indian medicine

Objective: To investigate the total phenols, flavonoids, carotenoids, antioxidant activity, antimicrobial and cytotoxic activity of Wrightia tinctoria flower extract. Methods: Total phenols, flavonoids, carotenoids conte...

In vitro antioxidant properties of sulfated polysaccharide from brown marine algae Sargassum tenerrimum

Objective: In the present study the physico chemical characteristics, total antioxidant capacity (TAC), reducing power and the free radical scavenging potentials (DPPH radical, ABTS, H2O2 radical) of sulfated polysacchar...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP227952
  • DOI 10.1016/S2222-1808(14)60779-9
  • Views 87
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

(2015). Ebola disease: an international public health emergency. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Disease, 5(4), 253-262. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-227952