Pinoy seaman undergoes Ebola virus tests in Togo

ATLANTA — A senior health official in Togo said on Thursday that two suspected cases, including a sailor from the Philippines, were being tested for the virus.

The World Health Organization said on Wednesday that 2,473 people have been infected and 1,350 have died since the Ebola outbreak was identified in remote southeastern Guinea in March.
 
It said that no cases of the disease had been confirmed outside of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Nigeria despite cases having been suspected elsewhere.
 
Three African doctors, also treated with ZMapp in Liberia, have shown remarkable signs of improvement, Liberian Information Minister Lewis Brown told Reuters on Tuesday.
 
Mapp says its supplies of the drug have been exhausted. 
 
As this developed an American doctor who contracted Ebola treating victims of the deadly virus in Liberia has recovered and was discharged on Thursday by the Atlanta hospital that treated him with an experimental drug, his charity said.
 
Dr. Kent Brantly of Texas was given ZMapp, a drug used on a handful of patients in the West African outbreak and produced by U.S.-based Mapp Biopharmaceutical.  — Reuters

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