The Prague Post - In Belgium, health expert readies to fly to DR Congo Ebola zone

EUR -
AED 4.267921
AFN 73.214228
ALL 95.49383
AMD 427.511923
ANG 2.080745
AOA 1066.834122
ARS 1623.770568
AUD 1.624571
AWG 2.094447
AZN 1.972002
BAM 1.959778
BBD 2.341352
BDT 142.869993
BGN 1.940662
BHD 0.438442
BIF 3460.81972
BMD 1.162129
BND 1.488521
BOB 8.032304
BRL 5.832959
BSD 1.16246
BTN 112.497343
BWP 15.764999
BYN 3.189474
BYR 22777.725494
BZD 2.337945
CAD 1.598026
CDF 2618.858711
CHF 0.915141
CLF 0.02654
CLP 1044.514532
CNY 7.904213
CNH 7.903697
COP 4330.173451
CRC 525.366372
CUC 1.162129
CUP 30.796415
CVE 110.692446
CZK 24.30395
DJF 206.533094
DKK 7.47272
DOP 68.439954
DZD 153.989287
EGP 62.074877
ERN 17.431933
ETB 188.74561
FJD 2.558717
FKP 0.867312
GBP 0.864955
GEL 3.102995
GGP 0.867312
GHS 13.422709
GIP 0.867312
GMD 84.250179
GNF 10203.491088
GTQ 8.861988
GYD 243.103444
HKD 9.103031
HNL 30.918758
HRK 7.534661
HTG 152.168867
HUF 359.479039
IDR 20509.01755
ILS 3.373538
IMP 0.867312
INR 112.248805
IQD 1522.388796
IRR 1535114.106257
ISK 143.431861
JEP 0.867312
JMD 183.913301
JOD 0.823974
JPY 184.675644
KES 150.449264
KGS 101.628601
KHR 4660.136222
KMF 493.904588
KPW 1045.88294
KRW 1739.462955
KWD 0.3594
KYD 0.968766
KZT 548.483294
LAK 25514.538969
LBP 104068.638748
LKR 400.472867
LRD 212.731796
LSL 19.117282
LTL 3.431464
LVL 0.70296
LYD 7.398016
MAD 10.714926
MDL 20.204009
MGA 4880.907108
MKD 61.631416
MMK 2439.614408
MNT 4160.088558
MOP 9.379238
MRU 46.467727
MUR 55.09642
MVR 17.90838
MWK 2018.617485
MXN 20.105236
MYR 4.613991
MZN 74.256817
NAD 19.262284
NGN 1594.675779
NIO 42.776827
NOK 10.766153
NPR 179.995349
NZD 1.980157
OMR 0.446825
PAB 1.16246
PEN 3.979177
PGK 5.068287
PHP 71.391862
PKR 323.835611
PLN 4.246825
PYG 7162.53829
QAR 4.227781
RON 5.238642
RSD 117.381971
RUB 82.787487
RWF 1700.852335
SAR 4.360838
SBD 9.334519
SCR 15.811188
SDG 697.848547
SEK 10.856434
SGD 1.48498
SHP 0.867647
SLE 28.585317
SLL 24369.263402
SOS 664.351337
SRD 43.120822
STD 24053.720902
STN 24.54983
SVC 10.171646
SYP 128.466947
SZL 19.117344
THB 37.849952
TJS 10.79932
TMT 4.079072
TND 3.409621
TOP 2.798127
TRY 52.967162
TTD 7.879995
TWD 36.696555
TZS 3033.16559
UAH 51.466164
UGX 4387.906431
USD 1.162129
UYU 46.865125
UZS 14042.503021
VES 601.186111
VND 30648.824207
VUV 137.445699
WST 3.156185
XAF 657.291148
XAG 0.015282
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.140711
XCG 2.095052
XDR 0.815992
XOF 657.291148
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.312991
ZAR 19.140466
ZMK 10460.557738
ZMW 21.999654
ZWL 374.205016
  • RBGPF

    0.7200

    63.23

    +1.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.85

    +0.22%

  • CMSD

    0.0950

    22.845

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    0.8800

    16.25

    +5.42%

  • RELX

    -0.0250

    33.555

    -0.07%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    24.22

    +0.99%

  • GSK

    0.0050

    51.055

    +0.01%

  • VOD

    0.1300

    15.28

    +0.85%

  • AZN

    3.4250

    188.065

    +1.82%

  • RIO

    2.3200

    103.24

    +2.25%

  • BTI

    -0.5150

    65.545

    -0.79%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.63

    +1.27%

  • NGG

    0.7850

    84.935

    +0.92%

  • BCC

    2.0300

    67.5

    +3.01%

  • BP

    -0.8450

    45.295

    -1.87%

In Belgium, health expert readies to fly to DR Congo Ebola zone

In Belgium, health expert readies to fly to DR Congo Ebola zone

Days before flying out to the Democratic Republic of Congo to help tackle a raging Ebola outbreak, Belgian infectious disease specialist Laurens Liesenborghs has one certainty: He is "preparing for a marathon and not for a sprint."

Text size:

Working with the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, the specialist is assembling equipment, including testing kits, and plans to conduct a clinical study on site to trial new treatments.

"We prepare first of all mentally," Liesenborghs told AFP as he readied to leave at the weekend for Kinshasa and then Bunia, in Ituri province in northeastern DRC, where the outbreak is spreading.

"It's not scary, but you need to know what you're doing," said Liesenborghs, who travels regularly to the country and describes two types of "insecurity" in the present situation.

You need to "know where it's safe to go and where it's not safe to go", he said, given the unrest in eastern DRC, where armed groups regularly carry out massacres.

And then "obviously, the virus itself poses a lot of danger or risk", with the DRC in this case facing a relatively uncommon strain of Ebola known as Bundibugyo.

"Vaccines are not yet approved, drugs are not yet approved, and also the diagnostic tests are much more difficult," Liesenborghs said.

"So we need to reinvent the wheel here a little bit for this atypical variant," he said. "And that, on top of the geographical insecurity, makes this response very, very, very challenging."

The infectious disease specialist believes the outbreak could worsen in the DRC, though in line with the World Health Organization, he does not currently see a risk of a global pandemic.

- 'Conspiracy theories and distrust' -

On the ground, Liesenborghs will, like his colleagues, wear a full protective suit, two pairs of gloves, a hood, protective goggles and a mask.

"There's a very specific procedure how to dress, but especially undress," he explained. "And during every step, you're sprayed with chlorine to kill every potential virus that is still left on the personal protective equipment."

Under tropical temperatures, "five minutes within the suit and you're soaking wet," he said.

"You can imagine staying in this suit for an hour, you're completely drained and dehydrated -- so that's very challenging."

"In these conditions, you then need to work with patients who are very ill, who are very afraid," he said.

One of the major challenges is building a relationship of trust with local communities where the team is working.

"Epidemics can really thrive where you have conflict and instability," Liesenborghs said.

"Because people often think, or they don't know, is this response, is this Ebola treatment unit, is it associated with the government? Is it associated with rebels? So they inherently don't trust this.

"In addition to this, an Ebola treatment centre is a very scary place," he said. "People approach you in these spacesuits. It looks really creepy. And then you see people that come in, more than half of them don't come out alive.

"Add this to conflict, and of course you will have conspiracy theories and distrust."

R.Rous--TPP