A leading academic
has warned that university students could be at risk from the deadly ebola virus
– because 21,000 students from countries in the affected region are about to
arrive in the UK.
Anthony Glees, the
Professor of Politics at Buckingham University, called for West African students
to be held in their home countries until they have been declared clear of ebola
and the 21-day incubation period has passed.
His comments came as
Sierra Leone announced that it was introducing a four-day ‘lockdown’ to try to
prevent the out-of-control epidemic from spreading further. People in the west
African country will not be allowed to leave their homes from September 18 to
21.
High level isolation apparatus in the High Secure
Infectious Disease Unit at The Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead
The disease spreads
through contact with infected blood, bodily fluids or contaminated environments
and has killed more than 2,100 in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Nigeria in
recent months.
Symptoms include
fever, bleeding and damage to the central nervous system, and the current
outbreak has a mortality rate of 55 per cent.
Professor Glees
accused the Government and universities of ‘extreme complacency’ over the issue.
‘This plague is on the rampage,’ he said.
‘What no one seems to
realise is that we are potentially at grave risk from any one of the 21,000
students from West African states who are going to arrive in the UK over the
next fortnight.
Ebola under the microscope - students from affected
countries could develop symptoms up to three weeks after arrival
‘Students from
affected countries could develop symptoms up to three weeks after arrival. Even
where they have been screened before departing they may be sick. We should
consider preventing them coming to the UK for 21 days so we can be sure they are
not sick.’
He suggested that
‘cash-strapped’ universities regarding overseas students as ‘a vital source of
income’ were turning a blind eye to the risk.
Last month
Universities UK, the governing authority for the country’s 136 universities,
issued advice to campuses saying that the risk of infection was ‘very
low’.
If a suspected case
emerged, the patient should be immediately isolated – and looked after by staff
equipped with ‘surgical gloves, plastic aprons, plastic visors and surgical
facemasks’.
But Professor Glees
said: ‘No university has this kind of kit to hand unless they have medical
schools. Many universities are in smaller towns and do not have the facilities
of larger cities such as London. Students are not only obliged to share toilet
and shower facilities, but exchanging bodily fluids is something they do with
great frequency.
‘I am appalled by the
total lack of practical advice, training or equipment for those working in
universities who may come into contact with infected students.’
However, last night
Dr Ben Neuman, a virology expert at Reading University who teaches students from
West Africa, said: ‘The screening system at airports means that the numbers of
infected patients potentially reaching the UK is tiny. Universities who think
they have a case on their hands would refer it immediately to hospital.’
DAILYMAIL.CO.UK
No comments:
Post a Comment