Workers unload the anti-Ebola materials from China at the airport in Dakar, Senegal, Nov. 1, 2014. A new batch of Chinese government aid, including Personal Protection Equipment (PPEs), body temperature detectors and scanners arrived at Dakar, Senegal on Saturday, to help fight the Ebola epidemie spreaded in West Africa. (Xinhua/Li Jing) |
BEIJING, Nov. 1 -- China is delivering more supplies and pledges to the West African countries struggling to quench the Ebola outbreak.
China handed over on Friday anti-Ebola supplies worth 5 million yuan (about 810,000 U.S. dollars) to Ghana, including protective clothing and goggles, sprayers, gauze masks, body thermometers as well as temperature monitors.
Chinese Ambassador to Ghana Sun Baohong said China and Africa are a community of shared destiny and that the Chinese government and people would always stand side by side with Africa to tide over this difficult time.
"I firmly believe that, as long as the international community stands united in mind and in action, we will achieve the final victory in the fight against the Ebola epidemic at an early date," she said.
The Chinese government highly appreciates Ghana's leading and exemplary role in assisting its neighbors in fighting the deadly disease, Sun said.
Ghanaian Health Minister Kwaku Agyemang-Mensah expressed gratitude to the government of China for its donation when Ghana is preparing, as part of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), to support the eradication of Ebola from the sub-region.
"This donation will go a long way to give impetus, motivation and assurance of the highest available protection to health workers who have sacrificed to be trained to be the front-liners to interventions against Ebola," he said.
Also on Friday, China and Sierra Leone, one of the three hardest hit West African countries, signed an agreement in Freetown, under which China is to build a permanent laboratory in Sierra Leone, as the battle against the disease intensifies.
Chinese Ambassador to Sierra Leone Zhao Yanbo, who signed the agreement on behalf of the Chinese government, said that China has realized the challenges Sierra Leone is facing in its health care delivery service, especially with the outbreak of the Ebola disease.
That is why China has made emergency medical aid to support the government and people of Sierra Leone to fight the disease, Zhao said.
Zhao said the laboratory is to help the country fight any further outbreak of any other tropical diseases.
Since the outbreak of Ebola, the Chinese government has taken the lead in responding to the appeal of the affected countries and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Starting from April this year, China, the first foreign country to provide assistance to the affected nations, has delivered three batches of emergency relief items to the affected countries. The fourth batch is under way.
In addition to providing fund, food, and disease prevention materials, China also set up laboratories and holding centers and sent expert groups and medical teams to the affected countries.
On Friday in Beijing, China pledged to continue its assistance to those African countries.
"China's assistance will not stop as long as the Ebola epidemic (continues) in West Africa," said Lin Songtian, director of the Chinese Foreign Ministry's African Affairs Department.
So far, China has directed aid worth 122 million dollars in four batches to West African countries.
The fourth batch of assistance, announced on Friday for the construction of a 100-bed treatment center in Liberia, will be managed and operated by a medical team from the People's Liberation Army (PLA), said Lin.
The treatment center will be the only one in the three epidemic-stricken countries that is constructed, staffed and operated by a foreign country, Lin added.
The Chinese government has selected and trained 480 medical staff from the PLA to be sent to Liberia.
Also in the fourth round of assistance, China will provide 60 ambulances, 100 motorcycles, 10,000 health-care kits, 150,000 pieces of personal protection equipment as well as other materials such as hospital beds, pick-up trucks and incinerators.
The Asian country will send more health experts to help train local medical personnel and draft a long-term plan for China-Africa public health cooperation.
Besides, China will donate 6 million dollars to the UN Ebola Response Multi-partner Trust Fund and work with international organizations and countries concerned to help African countries, Lin said.
Lin said there are nearly 200 Chinese medical staff in West Africa at present and with the addition of the fourth batch of assistance, the experts and medical staff sent by China to the region will surpass 700.
The WHO on Friday unveiled its latest revised figures, saying 4,951 people had died of Ebola in eight countries and a total of 13,567 Ebola cases were reported, as of October 29.
Earlier this week the WHO had reported 4,922 deaths and 13,703 cases, most deaths were in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
It said the case figure was revised down after finding that some cases, particularly in Guinea, were not actually Ebola.
The latest WHO figures showed Liberia with 2,413 deaths in 6,535 cases of Ebola, Sierra Leone with 1,510 deaths in 5,338 cases, and Guinea with 1,018 deaths in 1,667 cases.
Meanwhile, the organization on Friday published recommendations on personal safety protection to health workers for treating patients with filovirus infection, including Ebola and Marburg.
The guideline listed a dozen recommendations, from head to toe.
On top of the list is the protection of one's eyes, nose and mouth, as the main route of infection is through contact of contaminated blood or other bodily fluids like vomit and sweat, with the mucous membranes.
The experts recommended health workers have these organs covered with personal protective equipment (PPE) whenever they provide clinical care. Choices include face shields, goggles and medical masks.
A second area the guideline focused on is the protection of hands. Double gloves are recommended to reduce the potential risk of transmission due to glove holes, or chemical erosion.
Although PPE is the most visible control to prevent transmission, the WHO says that it must be used together with other means of controls, including facilities protecting nursing areas, water and sanitation, and waste management and ventilation.
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