- FDA Approves Self-Injection of Vyvgart Hytrulo
- New Trial Will Test Gene-Edited Pig Liver for Sudden Liver Failure Patients
- Autism Rates Rise Again, Now Affecting 1 in 31 U.S. Children
- Arkansas, Indiana Push to Ban Candy, Soda From SNAP Program
- Blood Test Can Predict Melanoma Recurrence
- Brisk Walking Lowers Risk Of Heart Rhythm Disorders
- Timing Might Be Everything With Asthma Inhalers
- Heavy Weed Use Increases Risk Of Dementia
- CT Scans Can Increase Your Cancer Risk
- FDA Approves Combo of Opdivo Plus Yervoy for Advanced Liver Cancer
Scope of Ebola Outbreak May Be Greater Than Statistics Show: WHO

The magnitude of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa may be far greater than the current statistics indicate, officials from the World Health Organization said Friday.
Patients are flooding treatment centers that have just been opened, and the recorded case and death tolls may “vastly underestimate the magnitude of the outbreak,” said WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl, the Associated Press reported.
For example, an 80-bed treatment center that recently opened in Liberia’s capital filled up immediately, Hartl noted, and dozens of people lined up the next day to be treated for Ebola.
The latest WHO figures peg the death toll at 1,069, with nearly 2,000 confirmed cases. At this point, Ebola cases have been reported in Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.
In a bit of good news, no new cases have been detected in Nigeria following the deaths of three people in the past month, according to the latest update from WHO.
Experts from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have helped Nigerian health officials with monitoring efforts in that country, and that has kept the number of additional cases down, WHO said.
The CDC is also providing computer software and hardware to the countries hit hardest by Ebola, so officials there can track and analyze the outbreak’s spread in real time, WHO added.
And food is being delivered to the more than 1 million people who are now in quarantine zones by the World Food Programme. These zones are mostly located where the borders of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone intersect.
More information
Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more on the Ebola outbreak.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.