Ebola death toll passes 3, 300: WHO

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The death toll in the world’s worst-ever Ebola epidemic has now soared past 3,300, with the virus killing almost half of the more than 7,000 people it has infected, according to World Health Organization figures released Wednesday.

In its latest update, the UN health agency said that a total of 7,178 people had been infected across five west African countries and that of those 3,338 had died.

At the weekend, the UN health agency said a total of 6,574 people had been infected and that of those 3,091 had died.

Separately, health officials in the United States have announced the country’s first case of Ebola in a man who was infected in Liberia and travelled to Texas. He is in a serious but stable condition.

In Guinea, where the outbreak began late last year, Ebola had infected 1,157 people, killing 710 of them. In Liberia, which has been hit the hardest by the outbreak, 3,696 people had been infected with Ebola and 1,998 of them had died. In Sierra Leone, Ebola had meanwhile infected 2,304 people and killed 622 of them.

Senegal’s only confirmed Ebola case — a Guinean student who crossed the border just before it was closed on August 21 — has recovered, but the country will not be declared free of the virus until 42 days after the case was recorded.

There are five known distinct species of Ebola and the outbreak raging in West Africa stems from the Zaire species ­ the deadliest of the lot.

That species caused the world’s first known Ebola outbreak in 1976 in Zaire, now known as DR Congo, which until now was the deadliest on record, with 280 deaths.