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  • Dealing With Ebola: Armenia Takes Measures To Prevent Penetration Of

    DEALING WITH EBOLA: ARMENIA TAKES MEASURES TO PREVENT PENETRATION OF DEADLY VIRUS

    HEALTH | 09.10.14 | 11:04
    http://armenianow.com/society/health/57468/armenia_ebola_prevention_health

    Photo: www.wikipedia.org

    By SARA KHOJOYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Although the World Health Organization (WHO) does not consider Armenia
    to be a "target" for Ebola, a deadly virus spreading at a fast pace
    in the world today, Armenian health officials say they have already
    taken the necessary steps to prevent its penetration and contain its
    spread in the event of its penetration.

    Already on August 5, upon the order of the minister of health, the
    Ministry's specialists visited the regions and conducted trainings with
    a large number of professionals to provide more information related
    to Ebola, its diagnosis and further steps, head of the Ministry's
    Division of Epidemiology Liana Torosyan told ArmeniaNow.

    "Now we are preparing information bulletins for the population to
    raise awareness about this matter. They will be prepared in 10 days
    and will be available in public places. Booklets for passengers are
    being drafted separately. We are adjusting our laboratory capacities
    to the criteria for fighting the virus," said Torosyan.

    The virus disease was first identified in Africa in 1976. U.S.

    President Barack Obama has already described the most recent Ebola
    outbreak as a threat to global security. As many as 7,500 people have
    reportedly been affected by the virus in the past year, of whom 3,500
    have died. Of the 300 affected medical workers 240 have died. The
    disease has already left Africa and reached Europe and North America.

    The WHO has even published the list of the countries where there is
    a more than 50-percent chance of being affected by Ebola - the UK,
    France, Belgium, the Netherlands, etc..

    Armenia is not among the high risk countries, as the countries where
    the virus is rampant - Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria -
    have no direct flights with Armenia. Nevertheless, as a World Trade
    Organization member, Armenian cannot prohibit the entry of these
    country's citizens, as the WTO does not encourage such an approach.

    Instead, the WHO has put health organizations, airports on high alert,
    has increased efforts on informing passengers about the disease,
    said Torosyan.

    "Control at all border points has been stepped up. Thermometers to
    measure people's body temperature have been installed. Special wards
    have been made available at the Nork hospital," added the ministry
    official.

    Ebola is a hemorrhagic fever with a high mortality rate: often between
    25 and 90 percent. Fruit bats are believed to be a carrier and may
    spread the virus without being affected. It may spread to monkeys,
    pigs, wild boars, dear, as well as humans, but Ebola is not transmitted
    through air, it is transmitted by contact with an infected animal's
    body fluids.

    The virus can spread from human to human by contact with products of
    vomiting, blood, saliva, urine and stool, internal organs.

    "The virus, however, is subject to mutation and often at a genetic
    level, so it becomes more contagious and dangerous," Torosyan told
    ArmeniaNow. "The incubation period of the disease is from several
    hours to 21 days. There is no special treatment yet for the disease.

    Now doctors try to kill the virus with anti-virus vaccinations."

    At present, there is no vaccination that would prevent the spread
    of the disease, while the drugs that are being tested today, even
    if they prove effective, are unlikely to become applicable until the
    second half of 2015.

    Until then, Armenia's government has also banned the import of
    antelopes, bats and wild boars from Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone
    and Nigeria before they are determined as safe with a corresponding
    procedure.

    According to the data of the Ministry of Agriculture's Food Safety
    Service, this year none of the mentioned animals has been imported
    to Armenia. In 2012, 36 monkeys and in 2013 - 28 monkey were imported.

    The reports about the death of a monkey imported to Armenia from
    Africa do not correspond to the reality, said the Health Ministry
    official. "If there were such a thing, we would have had lots of
    registered deaths."

    Speaking about the tour of the Gosha traveling circus, Torosyan
    said that its animals have been with the circus for a long time now,
    they are not from Africa and undergo regular medical examination.

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