Both are significantly higher than those previously released by WHO. It put the number of the dead at 5,674 and the number of the infected at 15,901 Wednesday.
The United Nations health
agency has indicated it believes the number of dead could be even higher
because many people died before they could be diagnosed. The organization also
reports that numerous others have likely contracted the virus in remote areas
where they do not have access to health care.
WHO’s latest report found
Liberia has had 7,244 confirmed cases of Ebola and 4,181 deaths, CNN reported.
Meanwhile, nearby Sierra Leone, which has seen an increase in cases recently,
has been reporting 400 to 500 new cases every week for several weeks, the
Associated Press said.
In contrast, the health
agency found the situation in Liberia has stabilized, with reported cases of
Ebola lessening in the past five weeks.
The latest figures showed
that about 60 percent of those infected have died from the virus.
The U.N. has sought aid
from a number of countries outside Africa and requested almost $1 billion in
September to help Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone control the deadly outbreak.
While experimental drugs
and treatments have been used to treat Ebola, there is no vaccine capable of
preventing the virus yet. However, the U.S. National Institutes of Health is
reportedly in the advanced stages of testing a GlaxoSmithKline PLC vaccine to
help stop the disease.
CNN
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