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Tuesday 5 August 2014

Ebola vaccine 'does not exist because it mainly affects Africans', claims top doctor

Yes because it's a manufactured just like Aids was. Why does it only happen in Africa? Because it's used as a testing, experimenting and bleeding ground  

Local burial practices are thought to be helping spread the disease, which is transferred by direct bodily contactFacebookTwitterWhatsAppClick to openPinterestGoogle PlusRedditStumble UponLinEmailClcomments
  • Pharmaceutical companies are unwilling to invest in vaccine research because it only affects a powerless minority, Professor John Ashton claims
  • Response is similar to that for Aids, in which media, politicians and scientists only took notice when it started affecting western countries
  • More than 700 people have died in four countries across West Africa since March, in what has become the biggest Ebola epidemic in history
Professor John Ashton said the virus must be tackled as though it was in Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster
Professor John Ashton said the virus must be tackled as though it was in Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster

Pharmaceutical companies are unwilling to invest in vaccines and research to cure the deadly Ebola disease because it is only killing Africans, a leading UK doctor has claimed.

Professor John Ashton, the president of the UK Faculty of Public Health, has claimed no cure for the disease has been discovered because it so far has only affected powerless minorities.

He likened the response to that of Aids, for which treatments were developed only when it started affecting western countries.

The current Ebola outbreak - which has no vaccine, no cure and kills up to 90 per cent of victims - is currently ravaging the West African countries of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Liberia.

There have been 729 deaths from 1,329 confirmed cases of Ebola in this year’s epidemic - making it the largest Ebola outbreak in history.

Writing in the Independent on Sunday, Professor Ashton said: 'We must respond to this emergency as if it was in Kensington, Chelsea, and Westminster.

'We must also tackle the scandal of the unwillingness of the pharmaceutical industry to invest in research to produce treatments and vaccines, something they refuse to do because the numbers involved are, in their terms, so small and don't justify the investment.

'This is the moral bankruptcy of capitalism acting in the absence of an ethical and social framework.'

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Health officials in the U.S. have warned Americans not to travel to Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea
Health officials in the U.S. have warned Americans not to travel to Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea
Local burial practices are thought to be helping spread the disease, which is transferred by direct bodily contact
Local burial practices are thought to be helping spread the disease, which is transferred by direct bodily contact
Nurses in Liberia preparing Ebola victim bodies for burial in the isolation unit of a ELWA Hospital, in Monrovia
Nurses in Liberia preparing Ebola victim bodies for burial in the isolation unit of a ELWA Hospital, in Monrovia

WHO director-general Margaret Chan has also warned the virus is currently moving faster than efforts to control it.

She said: ‘This outbreak is moving faster than our efforts to control it. If the situation continues to deteriorate, the consequences can be catastrophic in terms of lost lives, severe socioeconomic disruption and a high risk of spread to other countries.’

WHO has said the Ebola virus, pictured, is spreading faster than the efforts being made to control it
WHO has said the Ebola virus, pictured, is spreading faster than the efforts being made to control it
A woman in Monrovia prays for the virus to stop spreading. It has killed more than 700 people since March
A woman in Monrovia prays for the virus to stop spreading. It has killed more than 700 people since March
Reporters gather at the entrance to Emory University Hospital, in Atlanta Georgia, where the the first of two US aid workers infected with the disease was taken upon his return to the US
Reporters gather at the entrance to Emory University Hospital, in Atlanta Georgia, where the the first of two US aid workers infected with the disease was taken upon his return to the US
 
MSF struggling against Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone

Speaking at a meeting in Guinea’s capital Conakry, she told the presidents of Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast that the virus could be stopped.

But she said that cultural practices such as traditional burials were a significant cause of its spread.

Meanwhile, Emirates, the Mideast's largest airline, said today it had halted flights to Guinea because of concerns about the spread of the Ebola virus.

The Dubai-based carrier said flights to the Guinean capital of Conakry were suspended beginning Saturday until further notice.

The airline will continue flying to the West African nation of Senegal, which borders Guinea, saying it 'will be guided by the updates from international health authorities'.FacebookTwitterWhatsAppClick to openPinterestGoogle PlusRedditStumble UponDigg itLinkedInEmailCliccomments

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