Lassa fever hits Sierra Leone refugee camps

Published Apr 11, 2003

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Freetown - Eight people have died of highly infectious Lassa fever in central Sierra Leone and the disease has spread to camps for Liberian refugees in the region, health officials said on Wednesday.

About 80 patients were receiving treatment at the Kenema Government Hospital, 200km east of Freetown, the manager of the disease prevention programme in the ministry of health, Magnus Gborie, told reporters.

The disease, which leads to high fever, aches, skin rashes and potential death through heart or kidney failure, is spread by bush rats that urinate on food, health officials said.

People who eat the contanimated food become infected within 24 hours. Lassa fever is endemic in both the Kenema and Kailahun districts of Sierra Leone, but has previously been kept in check with medical assistance from the Centre for Disease Control in Atlanta in the United States.

However, such aid was scaled down during the civil war that wracked the west African country from 1991 to 2001.

Gborie said officials from the health ministry, the UN World Health Organisation and a number of non-governmental organisations have set up a task force to combat the outbreak.

Four UN peacekeepers in a force deployed in the country have been treated for Lassa fever and discharged from hospital, officials said. - Sapa-AFP

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