The Ebola case was discovered in Ivory Coast over the weekend in an 18-year-old Guinean woman who had traveled by road from Labe in Guinea, a journey of some 1,500km (930 miles), Aljazeera reported.
It was Ivory Coast’s first known case of the disease since 1994.
Ebola is often deadly, causing severe fever and, in the worst cases, unstoppable bleeding. It is transmitted through close contact with bodily fluids, and people who live with or care for patients are most at risk.
The discovery in Ivory Coast came nearly two months after the United Nations’ health agency declared an end to Guinea’s second outbreak of Ebola, which started last year and killed 12 people.
“In Labe, 58 contacts have been identified,” Elhadj Mamadou Houdy Bah, the regional health director, told AFP news agency.
“The good news is that none of them are presenting any signs (of Ebola) at the moment, all are being followed,” he added.
The driver of the vehicle that transported the young Ebola sufferer to Abidjan, Ivory Coast’s largest city, is one of the causes identified.
As the sole center in Labe able to handle such contact cases is currently full with coronavirus patients, the Ebola contact cases were placed under confinement at home for an observation period of 21 days, the Guinean health authorities said.
An Ebola outbreak between 2013-2016 killed 11,300 people throughout West Africa, including 2,300 people in Guinea.
The World Health Organization (WHO) believes the toll has been underestimated.
RHM/PR
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