The
 Ebola outbreak in Guinea is over, the World Health Organisation (WHO) 
said on Wednesday, the second time the West African nation has been 
declared free of the virus.
It has been six weeks since the last confirmed Ebola patient tested negative for the virus, according to the WHO report.
The source of infection for the latest outbreak had likely been exposure to infected bodily fluid from an Ebola survivor.
After having been declared free of Ebola
 in December, Guinea reported seven confirmed and three probable 
infections in March and April.
The country now enters a 90-day period 
of heightened surveillance to ensure that any new cases are identified 
before they can spread.
“We must continue to be vigilant to 
ensure that we rapidly detect and stop any new cases that may occur,” 
said WHO Guinea representative Abou Bekr Gaye.
In neighbouring Liberia, three new Ebola
 cases were reported in early April, with the last patient testing 
negative on April 28th.
If no new cases occur, Liberia will be declared free of Ebola by June 9th.
The WHO nevertheless lifted its global 
health alert on Ebola at the end of March, meaning the virus no longer 
constitutes a global health emergency.
The disease has killed more than 11,000 people in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone since the outbreak began in December 2013.

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