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Antibody spike months after Ebola infection surprisingly common -- Health & Wellness -- Sott net

© JANET SCOTT An Ebola survivor donates plasma at the blood bank at Connaught Hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone.A substantial proportion of people who survive Ebola may produce a spike in antibody levels more than six months after they ve recovered from the disease, according to a study published today (January 27) in . Analyzing multiple plasma samples from 51 survivors of the West African outbreak of 2013-2016, researchers found that the levels of virus-neutralizing antibodies declined, as expected, in the days and weeks following recovery. But these levels shot up again in some survivors around the 200- to 300-day mark before declining again evidence that Ebola virus may be lingering inside their bodies and re-emerging to trigger immune defenses, the researchers conclude in their paper.

Nurse Volunteer (Clinical & Education) | Funded

Despite Ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic, Malaria Remains a Leading Killer in Sierra Leone : Sierra Leone Concord Times

December 22, 2020 By Elizabeth A. Kaine The World Health Organization’s (WHO) World Malaria Report 2020, which is posted on their website, reveals that Sierra Leone in recent times has one of the world’s highest burdens of malaria cases – accounting for an estimated 6,824 deaths (or roughly 2% of all malaria deaths recorded globally) in 2019. According to the Government of Sierra Leone’s own ‘Malaria Control Strategic Plan (2016-2020)’, malaria is endemic in Sierra Leone and transmission has been recorded in all areas of the country. At the time of the plan’s publication (in late 2015), malaria accounted for 40.3% of outpatient morbidity for all ages, and it accounted for 37.6% of all hospital admissions in the country.

Skin-bleaching on the increase in Sierra Leone

Skin-bleaching on the increase in Sierra Leone  27 December 2020 at 19:06 |  By Teddy Foday-Musa, Freetown, Sierra Leone Intro. This article was first published in 2008 to serve as a deterrent to skin-bleaching in Sierra Leone. But after more than a decade, the act of skin-bleaching seems to resurface and continues to appeal to our young teenage girls and adult women in the country. It is against this background that an edited version of the article is prepared for publication to serve as a reminder to victims of skin-bleaching. The article explores the medical complication of skin-bleaching. It clearly articulates the importance of the three-layers of our dark skin and their preventive attributes in protecting us from skin cancer and other related skin diseases.

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