You are here
Ebola Toll in Sierra Leone 'Could Have Been Halved If UK Had Acted Earlier'
Primary tabs
Sierra Leone health officials check people transiting at the border crossing with Liberia in Jendema in March 2015.
Photograph: Zoom Dosso/AFP/Getty Images
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine finds that if Britain had set up beds one month earlier, about 7,500 people would not have become ill
CLICK HERE - RESEARCH - Measuring the impact of Ebola control measures in Sierra Leone
theguardian.com - by Sarah Boseley - October 12, 2015
The number of Ebola cases in Sierra Leone could have been halved if treatment beds had been set up by the UK government and charities just one month earlier, a report claims.
The slow response of the World Health Organisation and others to the increasingly desperate pleas for help from people on the ground, especially Médecins sans Frontières, has attracted widespread criticism. Now researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine have revealed how many could have been spared the disease if action had been taken sooner.
Recent Comments