Minister allays Ebola fears

Dr Parirenyatwa
Dr Parirenyatwa

Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter
Health workers have gone into panic mode because of the deadly Ebola virus and spreading rumours of an outbreak at some health institutions, a Cabinet minister has said.
Health and Child Care Minister Dr  David Parirenyatwa said tests of suspected Ebola incidents were sent to South Africa and results were negative. That gave the country a clean bill of health from the deadly disease at the moment, he said.

Minister Parirenyatwa said this on Thursday in the National Assembly where he delivered a ministerial statement responding to rumours that a patient had died of Ebola at Parirenyatwa Hospital this week.

He said the latest rumour started after a patient presented himself with some symptoms synonymous with those of Ebola.
“The rumours are spread through social media due to panic that happened at Parirenyatwa Hospital, particularly by health workers,” said Minister Parirenyatwa.
He said the patient, who worked in Mozambique and came to Parirenyatwa in an ambulance, had a high temperature, appeared generally very ill, in a confused state and required resuscitation.

“He was put on a drip and, because of the confusion, he pulled down the drip and then there was blood all over. Because the patient looked like he had blood all over, the staff thought he was oozing blood from everywhere. So I would want to dispel that rumour, that we do not have Ebola at the moment and I hope we will continue like that,” he said.

He said the first rumour about an Ebola case emanated from South Medical Hospital in Chitungwiza after a patient presented himself a week ago with some symptoms that appeared to consistent with those of Ebola.

Minister Parirenyatwa said the patient was admitted and died three days later. Upon enquiry about his background, it emerged that he had visited the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of the countries that have recorded the deadly disease.

A specimen was then collected and sent to South Africa and results came on September 17 2014 to the effect that he had no Ebola.
“We can conclude conclusively that the case at South Medical is not Ebola but rumours had already spread,” he said.

With respect to the second case at Parirenyatwa, the minister said there was no need to carry out tests because the patient who subsequently died had not visited any country hit by the disease nor had he got into contact with a suspect of Ebola as he worked in Mozambique.

Meanwhile, Trauma Centre, an elite private health institution in Harare, yesterday held an Ebola lecture for its employees to calm them after Wednesday’s rumours that a man had died of the disease at Parirenyatwa Hospital.

The hospital’s chief executive officer and chairman, Dr Vivek Solanki, said the lecture was meant to assure his staff that there had not been any detected case of Ebola in the country.

“Yesterday there was panic because of the situation at Parirenyatwa Hospital. WhatsApp messages were flying between medical doctors and nurses and spilled over to members of the public. Everyone was panicking as people had questions without answers,” he  said.

All staff at Trauma Centre attended the 30 minute lecture where they were briefed on the signs and symptoms of Ebola.
Ebola is highly infections and only transmitted through bodily fluids. Initial symptoms include fever, colds, weakness before complicating to bleeding.
To date, more than 2 200 people have died of the disease in West Africa.

 

Related Posts

DeliverED! . . . Zim lands UN Security Council seat . . . President hails diplomatic milestone

Innocent Madonko and Zvamaida Murwira-Herald Reporters PRESIDENT Mnangagwa has described as a “significant diplomatic milestone”, Zimbabwe’s huge victory which secured the country a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security…

CAB3 gets overwhelming public support

Nyore Madzianike-Senior Reporter THE Constitutional Amendment No.3 Bill has received overwhelming support with more than 530 000 written submissions to Parliament in its favour, while 2 935 were against it,…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×