KAMPALA, Uganda - Tuesday, October 14th 2014 [ME NewsWire]
(BUSINESS
WIRE)-- The AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) mourns the loss of another
Doctor, Dr. John Taban Dada, who died due to Ebola Virus Disease (EVD)
in West Africa. Dr. Dada, a Ugandan national, succumbed to the Disease
on 9th October 2014 in Monrovia, Liberia. By the time of his death, Dr.
Dada was working at Liberia’s largest hospital, JF Kennedy Memorial
Center, and was consulting with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation partner
in HIV service provision, People Associated for People’s Assistance
(PAPA).
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has continued a
persistent spread pushing the death toll over 4,000 as of 9th October
2014. Having been declared an international public health emergency by
the World Health Organization, Ebola Virus Disease has infected over 370
health workers and killed 216 doctors and nurses. In July, Dr. Sheik
Humarr Khan, 39, who served as Medical Officer for AHF’s Sierra Leone
Country Program, succumbed to the disease after being quarantined and
cared for by medical providers from Médecins Sans Frontières at the
isolation unit in the Kailahun District in Eastern Sierra Leone for
several days. In Liberia, Dr. Dada’s death brought to four (4) the
number of Doctors who have died since the outbreak.
“Our brothers
and sisters in West Africa need accelerated action by commissions such
as the African Union and the World Health Organization to expand
provision of appropriate and adequate personal protective equipment,
mobilize and deploy more health workers in the region, and increase and
equip more isolation centers specifically established to cater for
infected health workers,” said Dr. Penninah Iutung Amor, the AHF Bureau
Chief for the African Region. “All these are achievable – but only if
the commissions and the World Health Organization prioritize and scale
up addressing obstacles that are holding us back in the response.”
There
was hope late September when President Obama pledged support to the EVD
response in the region; however, the actualization of this support has
been delayed due to logistical challenges -- inadequate human resources
for health, poor state of the runway at the airport, and delays in
setting up new isolation centers. “Since we have few isolation centers,
we are seeing some people suffering from Ebola re-circulating into the
community and therefore driving the infection further,” said Chinnie
Sieh, Program Manager with People Associated for People’s Assistance
(PAPA). “This is a crisis that requires all the Africa Commissions, the
United Nations, all African governments and non-government actors to
respond.”
“It is high time that the containment of this outbreak
became a reality in the West African Countries of Sierra Leone, Guinea
and Liberia,” said Dr. Lydia Buzaalirwa, the Director for Quality
Management with AIDS Healthcare Foundation Africa Bureau. “Everybody
needs to take part in the control of Ebola. We need to cut the chain of
new transmissions, get in more volunteers, more logistics, and
communities should be involved in building new isolation units. We
demand that the African Union step up its leadership and exponentially
accelerate its response to the Ebola outbreak in the region.”
AIDS
Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization,
currently provides medical care and/or services to over 350,000
individuals in 36 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin
America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe. To learn
more about AHF, please visit our website: www.aidshealth.org, find us on
Facebook: www.facebook.com/aidshealth and follow us on Twitter:
@aidshealthcare.
Contacts
US:
Ged Kenslea, Senior Director, Communications, AHF
Telephone: (323) 308-1833
Mobile: (323) 791-5526
gedk@aidshealth.org
or
AFRICA:
Alice Kayongo, Regional Policy and Advocacy Manager - East/West Africa Bureau for AHF
Telephone: +256 20 440 0100
Mobile: +256 77 244 0108
alice.kayongo@aidshealth.org
Permalink: http://me-newswire.net/news/12432/en

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