The number of cases in
the Ebola outbreak has exceeded 10,000, with 4,922 deaths, the World Health
Organization says in its latest report.
Only 27 of the cases
have occurred outside the three worst-hit countries, Sierra Leone, Liberia and
Guinea.
Those three countries
account for all but 10 of the fatalities.
Mali became the latest
nation to record a death, a two-year-old girl. More than 40 people known to
have come into contact with her have been quarantined.
The latest WHO situation
report says that Liberia remains the worst affected country, with 2,705 deaths.
Sierra Leone has had 1,281 fatalities and there have been 926 in Guinea.
Nigeria has recorded
eight deaths and there has been one in Mali and one in the United States.
The WHO said the number
of cases was now 10,141 but that the figure could be much higher, as many
families were keeping relatives at home rather than taking them to treatment
centres. It said many of the centres were overcrowded.
And the latest report
also shows no change in the number of cases and deaths in Liberia from the
WHO's previous report, three days ago.
Eight countries have
registered cases in the outbreak. In West Africa, Senegal and Nigeria have now
been declared virus-free by the WHO.
'Facts, not fear'
In the US, the governors
of the states of New York and New Jersey have ordered a mandatory 21-day
quarantine period for all doctors and other travellers who have had contact
with Ebola victims in West Africa.
Anyone arriving from
affected West African countries without having had confirmed contact with Ebola
victims will be subject to monitoring by public health officials.
Health workers arrive to pick up the body of a young victim
in Freetown, Sierra Leone
The move follows the
diagnosis in New York of Dr Craig Spencer, who had been working in Guinea.
The first person to be
quarantined under the rules was a female health worker who arrived at Newark
Liberty International Airport on Friday.
She had no symptoms then
but later developed a fever. A preliminary test came back negative for Ebola,
the New Jersey health department said on Saturday, but the woman remains in
isolation.
Also in the US, two
nurses infected while caring for dying Dallas patient Thomas Eric Duncan have
been declared free of the virus.
One, Nina Pham, 26, met
President Barack Obama at the White House, hours after being
In his weekly radio and
online address, Mr Obama repeated that people cannot contract Ebola unless they
have come into direct contact with an infected patient's bodily fluids.
He said the disease had
to be stopped at source in Africa.
Mr Obama added:
"Patients can beat this disease, and we can beat this disease. But we have
to stay vigilant... And we have to be guided by the science, we have to be
guided by the facts - not fear."
BBC
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