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Don’t let quarantine hysteria deter Ebola health workers: UN

October 31, 2014 by  
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By Matthew Mpoke Bigg

ACCRA (Reuters) – Governments must not deter health workers from coming to West Africa to fight Ebola and quarantine decisions should not be based on hysteria, the head of the U.N. mission battling the virus said on Monday.

The U.S. states of New York, New Jersey and Illinois have issued new quarantine rules for people returning from West Africa in response to fears that U.S. federal guidelines do not go far enough to contain an outbreak centered in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone that has infected 10,000 people.

Some groups have challenged the rules as too extreme and a nurse who was quarantined after returning from Sierra Leone criticized her isolation on Sunday saying she posed no health threat.

“Anything that will dissuade foreign trained personnel from coming here to West Africa and joining us on the frontline to fight the fight would be very, very unfortunate,” Anthony Banbury, head of the U.N. Ebola Emergency Response Mission (UNMEER), told Reuters.

He said that health workers returning to their own countries should be treated as heroes.

“Decisions (on quarantine) should be based on science and fact and not hype and hysteria, and decisions should be taken in a way that will promote the most rapid, effective response,” Banbury said.

UNMEER was set up in part after complaints by aid groups that the World Health Organization had moved too slowly in its initial response to an outbreak that was identified in March.

FRESH WORKERS NEEDED

The mission has set itself a Dec. 1 deadline to have 70 percent of cases of Ebola under treatment and 70 percent of Ebola victims safely and humanely buried. There is an interim goal of mobilizing necessary resources by Nov. 1.

Speaking in Brussels, the European Union’s new Ebola coordinator urged doctors and nurses to volunteer to go to West Africa and help tackle the crisis.

“What is most needed at this stage is human expertise. The affected countries already have few skilled staff, especially health staff … They badly need reinforcements,” Christos Stylianides told reporters on Monday.

“We also need more beds, from 1,000 at present to 5,000 as soon as possible. Every bed requires eight health and support staff. This means we need to mobilize immediately at least 40,000 staff,” he said.

Banbury said a fresh audit of the needs and the international response showed the main requirement was for hundreds of foreign healthcare workers, preferably those who were ready to run Ebola Treatment Units.

“We need them and we need them really bad,” he said in an interview at the mission’s headquarters in the Ghanaian capital.

The East African Community has offered 600 workers while Ethiopia has offered 200 and UNMEER held talks with the World Bank on Monday on how they could be integrated into the overall effort.

The offers come in the context of criticism of the African Union and other regional bodies for not providing enough practical support to governments facing Ebola.

One of the biggest problems UNMEER faces is obtaining accurate statistics on the needs and the spread of the disease.

As a result, it is also difficult to be certain whether reports of empty beds at Ebola treatment centers in the capital of Liberia are early signs of a turning point in the fight against the disease or due to other factors, he said.

But a case of Ebola detected in Mali last week in a two-year-old girl who has since died must be prevented from becoming a national outbreak, he said.

The United Nations sent 1,000 sets of protective gear to Mali for health workers and is deploying fresh staff, he said.

“We are fighting the Ebola fight on three fronts in the three most affected countries. We cannot afford to fight it on a fourth. So the world, the international community, has to get on top of it really fast in Mali,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Adrian Croft in Brussels; Editing by Daniel Flynn, Ruth Pitchford and Crispian Balmer)

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Kate Moss Plays Peekaboo For Mario Testino’s Birthday

October 31, 2014 by  
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Kate Moss has been partying hard this week, and looking fabulous every step of the way.

After hitting the decks at the 50th Anniversary of Annabel’s private members club the night before, Kate stole the show at Mario Testino’s 60th Birthday bash at celeb hotspot The Chiltern Firehouse.

With the famed photographer choosing a ’40s theme for his party, Kate obliged in a stunning sheer red dress complemeted with side-swept vintage curls and red lips.

Seeing as her gown was on the see-through side, Mossy had slipped a leopard print body underneath for a peekaboo effect. Just look at those pins!

Kate had rocked the nude version of the body the night before, both of which are from pal Stella McCartney‘s lingerie line.

Not to be outdone, fellow super Naomi Campbell also flanked her favourite fashion snapper on his arrival in a stunning glittering gown with a seriously deep-V.

Ms C completed her look with a bright red rose-lined head garland adorning her updo.

And the vintage glamour didn’t even end there – see all the party pics from Mario’s bash in the gallery below…

By Hayley Spencer

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