Gulu Regional Referral Hospital has established an isolation ward to accommodate patients suspected to have contracted Ebola Virus Disease. The isolation ward was created following directives from the Health Ministry in readiness to combat the outbreak of the highly viral disease.
Uganda is battling the Ebola Sudan strain that broke out last month in Mubende District and has since spread to Kagadi, Kasanda, and Bunyangabu districts, killing 19 people with 58 confirmed cases.
Janani Loum Bishop, the Regional Coordinator of integrated disease surveillance and response, says the facility set up previously served as a COVID-19 isolation ward but has now been repurposed for suspects of Ebola Virus Disease.
“Gulu Regional referral hospital is ready to receive any case of Ebola in case it arises. We have our health workers that voluntarily accepted to work in the Ebola isolation treatment unit, “Loum said.”
He says the hospital management has already trained health workers with skills in managing Ebola patients, adding that they have been given protective gear, although it is not adequate.
As I speak, we have trained our health workers and also managed to prepare them with the protective gear, although it’s not adequate. We have, however, made a request to our partner, the World Health Organization (WHO), for more protective gear, “he says.
Loum notes that with the current trend of the Ebola virus, they have heightened their vigilance and are on high alert in order not to be taken by surprise.
In an interview, the Acting Gulu District Health Officer, Dr. Kenneth Cana, told URN in an interview that in readiness to combat the highly viral disease, the district reactivated the COVID-19 taskforce to carry out surveillance work for suspected Ebola cases.
Dr. Cyprian Opira, the Executive Director of St. Mary’s Hospital Lacor, a private health facility in the region, says they have equally set up a small isolation ward for suspected Ebola patients.
He, however, says, in any case, if they get suspected cases, they will still refer them to Gulu Regional Referral Hospital since they haven’t got a clear guideline on establishing the facility from the Ministry of Health, unlike during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The hospital has been key in the treatment of Ebola virus disease in 2000 and early 2001 when Gulu registered one of the worst outbreaks of Ebola in the country, which claimed over 200 lives.
On Friday, President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni imposed a travel lockdown for 21 days in the districts of Mubende and Kasanda in a bid to curb the spread of the virus.
According to the World Health Organization, Ebola virus disease (EVD) is a rare but severe, often fatal illness in humans, transmitted to people by wild animals and spreading in the human population through human-to-human transmission.