Skip to main content

WHO Responds to Ebola in Democratic Republic of the Congo

Coordination meetings for the deployed team take place first thing every morning and at the end of the working day. As dusk falls, all those involved in the response gather for a group debrief on the information that has been gathered by surveillance and treatment teams and results obtained
by the laboratory team. Updates on security, logistics, risk communications, infection prevention and control and psychosocial care are all shared, challenges are discussed and plans for the next day’s activities are outlined. Situation reports are provided daily to the National Coordination Committee in Kinshasa. Courtesy of WHO/A. Clements-Hunt

Multidisciplinary teams face numerous challenges as they respond to an outbreak of Ebola virus disease in the remote, forested regions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The World Health Organization (WHO) and partners are supporting the country’s Ministry of Health in all aspects of the response, including epidemiological investigation, surveillance, logistics and supplies, communications, and community engagement.

source: infectioncontroltoday

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, WHO and partners rapidly and effectively coordinate the response to Ebola.


picture story below

The grounds at a former convent in the health zone of Likati were quickly adapted to accommodate the Ministry of Health-led interagency team, as well as to store the medical and logistics supplies necessary to bring the outbreak to an end as quickly as possible.

One of the first challenges for the Ebola response multidisciplinary team arriving in the remote north of the Democratic Republic of the Congo was to find a base from which response activities could be coordinated. With impassable roads, extremely limited telecommunications coverage and an acute lack of infrastructure and basic commodities in the affected Bas-Uele province, creating an equipped and secure base camp was essential to ensure an effective and coordinated response.

Tents have been rapidly erected and a camp kitchen, latrines and other basic facilities put in place. Mobile generators power laptops, phones and lights, and essential supplies such as drinking water and fuel are flown in by helicopter with the support of the World Food Programme/UNHAS and the United Nations Organization Mission for the Stabilisation of the DRC (MONUSCO).





























To protect the health of all those supporting the response as well as to prevent spread of Ebola, everyone entering the coordination centre has their temperature taken to ensure they do not have a fever. Once their temperature has been taken, the people entering the compound must then wash their hands in chlorinated water.

more picture story at WHO

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

News: Restructuring for A United and Progressive Nigeria

By Atiku Abubakar (Former Vice President, FRN) Let me begin with a rhetorical question: why do I, Atiku Abubakar, favour a restructured Nigeria? The answer is simple: because I am proudly Nigerian and favour a united Nigeria that offers every man, woman and child a brighter future where each and everyone has a chance to build and share in this great nation’s potential.

400 PEOPLE TO ENJOY FREE MEDICAL SURGERY IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA

The free medical surgery would cover hernia, glaucoma, breast biopsy, burn excision/debridement and other diseases.