The Republic of Congo will soon be much better placed to fight outbreaks of Ebola thanks to mobile laboratories that can detect the deadly virus in situ within two hours, according to health officials. At present, suspected cases of Ebola are sent to Gabon, South Africa and even France for analysis.
Canada's Ministry of Health is helping to set up the labs, which are being financed by the European Union and the African Development Bank, and should be operational by 2009.
Between 2001 and 2005, Congo had several Ebola outbreaks, which killed more than 60 people, mostly in the northwestern Cuvette West region, home to the Odzala National Park.
Canadian Health Ministry officials have begun demonstrating the labs and training members of Congo's National Laboratory for Public Health.
Jean-Vivien Mombouli, the director of research at the laboratory, said the labs could also be employed to detect other viruses, such as Chikungunya, which has symptoms similar to dengue fever; Marburg and avian flu.
“We are going to make a lot of progress in the prevention and surveillance of these diseases,” he added.
Mombouli told IRIN that France had provided financing to survey Ebola-prone areas in the whole country. He said the Ebola outbreak in neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo last year had “taught us many lessons, we should not let our guard down”.
Photo: Laudes Mbon/IRIN ![]() |
| Dr Jean-Vivien Mombouli, Research Director at the National Public Health Laboratory |
"In the Pointe-Noire region we have the Tchimpounga Park. This could also be a reservoir for Ebola because of the gorillas and other primates," he said.
Many people who catch Ebola do so after eating or handling dead animals they find in the forest. Early symptoms include vomiting and a severe fever. As the disease takes over the body, it liquefies internal organs and causes haemorrhaging from multiple orifices. Depending on the strain of the virus, Ebola is fatal in up to 90 percent of cases. There is no cure or vaccine, so containment and early detection are crucial to minimising casualties.
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