Use Ebola survivors' blood to treat patients - WHO

•Health workers treating an Ebola patient

•Health workers treating an Ebola patient

•Health workers treating an Ebola patient
•Health workers treating an Ebola patient

World Health Organization has announced that the blood of patients who recover from Ebola Virus Disease should be used to treat others.

A global group of experts have been meeting in Geneva to assess the experimental therapies that could contain Ebola which has killed over 2,000 people with West Africa most hit in the largest Ebola outbreak in history.

The WHO also announced that Ebola vaccines could be used on the frontline by November said people produce antibodies in the blood in an attempt to fight off an Ebola infection.

In theory, those antibodies can be transferred from a survivor into a sick patient to give their immune system a boost.

However, large scale data on the effectiveness of the therapy is lacking.

Related News

Studies on the 1995 outbreak of Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo showed seven out of eight people survived after being given the therapy.

Dr. Margaret Chan, Director General WHO
Dr. Margaret Chan, Director General WHO

Dr Marie Paule Kieny, an assistant director general at WHO said: “We agreed that whole blood therapies may be used to treat Ebola virus and all efforts must be invested to help infected countries to use them.

“There is a real opportunity that a blood-derived product can be used now and this can be very effective in terms of treating patients.”

She said that it was the one positive aspect of so many people being infected.

“There are also many people now who have survived and are doing well. They can provide blood to treat the other people who are sick.”

Load more