Nubia's mother died shortly after childbirth from blood loss.
A one-month-old baby girl who was Guinea's last reported Ebola
case left hospital on Saturday, delighting medical staff and putting the
country on course to be declared free of the deadly virus.
Guinea will
become officially Ebola-free after 42 days if no new cases are reported
following the recovery of baby Nubia -- thought to be the first baby to survive
after being born to an infected mother.
An Ebola
outbreak has killed about 11,300 people mainly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra
Leone since it began two years ago. Liberia is now the only country with
confirmed cases after the virus re-emerged for a third time.
Family
members and medical staff played music and danced to celebrate Nubia's release
from the Nongo treatment centre in the capital Conakry. She tested negative for
the haemorrhagic fever last week, but MSF kept her in for monitoring.
Nubia's
mother died shortly after childbirth from blood loss.
Sailly said
she thought that Nubia, who was born Ebola-positive and named after an MSF
nurse, was able to survive due to experimental drugs as well as round-the-clock
care given by a 20-strong team.
"When
she (Nubia) started having convulsions, we thought the virus had entered the
brain and that's when we started the anti-viral," Sailly said.
"Everyone was following hour by hour."
Sailly said
Nubia had received Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc's Ebola drug ZMapp as well as an
experimental anti-viral drug known as GS-5734 being developed by the U.S.
drugmaker Gilead Sciences.
Nubia was
connected to a monitoring system which allowed staff to track her breathing and
heart rate without entering the high-risk zone, although staff still had to
enter regularly to change her diapers and bottle-feed her.
"She
is a symbol of what we are capable of doing at this stage of the
epidemic," Sailly said.
At the
height of the outbreak last summer, some Ebola patients died in the street in
Liberia waiting for hospitals to admit them. At a centre in Sierra Leone,
doctors tended to dozens of patients each.
Ebola
patients are highly-contagious and can spread the virus through fluids emitted
in high quantities during the late stages of infection, such as blood, vomit
and diarrhoea.
For
ordinary Guineans, the recovery of Baby Nubia has raised hopes that the virus
has gone for good.
"We
want Ebola to leave this country. The baby is cured, and may God strengthen her
health," said Conakry resident Moussa Sylla after news of Nubia's recovery
became known last week. "All this is a source of joy for us."

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