A British nurse who contracted Ebola while working as a volunteer in Sierra Leone is “no longer critically ill”, the London hospital treating her said Monday. From AFP:
Pauline Cafferkey is showing signs of improvement but remains in isolation, the Royal Free Hospital in London said in a statement.
Cafferkey was diagnosed in Glasgow on December 29 before being transferred to the Royal Free, which has the only isolation ward for Ebola patients in Britain.
She had contracted the disease while working as a volunteer at a British-built Ebola treatment centre in Sierra Leone.
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed nearly 8,300 people with more than 21,000 cases identified since December of last year, according to World Health Organization (WHO) figures.
The vast majority of cases have been in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
A total of 838 healthcare workers are known to have contracted the virus and 495 of them had died as of January 4, the WHO has said.
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Global Health and Development Beat
Developing and bringing to market effective Ebola vaccines requires extreme measures and unprecedented international cooperation, global health experts said on Monday.
The World Health Organisation approved an effective and affordable vaccine for meningitis, called MenAfriVac, to be used for vulnerable children.
At least 200,000 malaria treatments donated earlier this year have arrived in Kenya. The drugs, coartem, will be distributed in malaria endemic zones for treatment and prevention, reports the Star.
NPR tells the story of Hugarian Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis, the man who figured out in the 19th century that handwashing saves lives.
Despite such a success in the health sector, not all aid projects fulfill the hopes originally placed in them. In 2013 alone, $1.4 billion of development aid went to Tanzania, which is the second-largest recipient of development aid in sub-Saharan Africa. Despite this, half the population still lives in poverty and frustration is growing.
China will not follow the path of “Western colonists” in Africa, its foreign minister said during a five-nation tour of the continent, parrying criticism that his country’s hunger for resources has led to one-sided policies and damaging projects.
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Buzzing in the Blogs
Stories from Kenya by Sabrina Rubli show how menstrual cups are changing the lives of women in the region. She writes from the Huffington Post:
Menstrual cups create economic freedom and relieve the financial burden of menstruation. Without having to budget for sanitary pads each month, women are better able to provide for themselves and their families.
Having 12 hours of protection allows women to go about her life without having to worry about locating latrines — a major challenge in many communities. It also allows her to control her body — emptying the cup when she has the time for a shower.
For schoolgirls, having a menstrual cup allows them to attend school — every day of the month. Girls in Kenya will miss an average of 4.9 days of school each month because of her periods, adding up to around 20 per cent of the school year. Giving a schoolgirl a menstrual cup means she no longer needs to leave school to find a latrine during the day. She is no longer afraid of leaking, and being mocked by her classmates. She can sit comfortably in class and participate in school activities. She no longer needs to skip breakfast to buy pads.
Keeping girls in the classroom allows them to excel academically, and increases their odds of continuing on to post-secondary school, and becoming influential and respected members of society.
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Capital Events
Wednesday
6:00 AM – Author Event: Dictators and Democracy in African Development – Institute for Policy Studies
Thursday
10:00 AM – Top Priorities for Africa in 2015 – Brookings
12:00 PM – The UNEP and Climate Change – Environmental Law Institut
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By Mark Leon Goldberg and Tom Murphy
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Disclaimer: Opinions presented in this email do not necessarily reflect the views of PSI.