First confirmed Ebola patient in Mali dies

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The first confirmed Ebola patient in Mali has died, according to state TV reports, citing government health officials.
The victim, a 2-year-old girl, had traveled to the country with her grandmother from Guinea -- one of the three countries hardest hit during the recent Ebola outbreak chidexboy.
Earlier on Friday, the World Health Organization said that the girl had multiple opportunities to expose others to the virus.
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The girl first went to a clinic Tuesday after entering the country, WHO Assistant Director-General Marie-Paule Kieny said at a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland.
The WHO said it was working to confirm media reports that the child's mother showed Ebola-like symptoms before her death.
The girl was diagnosed with Ebola in Mali on Thursday.
Health Ministry spokeswoman Markatie Daou said the dozens of people who had contact with the girl have not shown any symptom related to the virus, as of Friday.
More than 40 people are still being monitored, she said.
They include 10 medical workers who came into contact with the girl in the city of Kayes, west of the Mali capital of Bamako, WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said. Kayes has a population of about 128,000 people.
He cited local authorities as saying 43 people were being monitored in total. The incubation period for Ebola is two to 21 days, so the country faces a long wait to know if it's in the clear.
The young girl, whose father died of Ebola, was taken to the hospital in Kayes after a nurse noticed she was suffering from what appeared to be Ebola-like symptoms.
The case makes Mali the sixth West African country to be hit by the virus, which WHO reported has killed more than 4,800 people. Nigeria and Senegal have in recent days been declared free of the disease.
Complete coverage on Ebola
Ousmane Kone, Mali's minister for public health, called for people in Kayes to "stay calm" and observe "hygiene measures."
He asked anyone who'd had contact with the girl to contact authorities.
Extra WHO medical experts are being sent immediately to Mali to help its Ministry of Health respond, Jasarevic said. They will bolster a WHO team that was already in the country to help with general preparedness.
New vaccine trials
Five more potential Ebola vaccines are to start clinical trials soon, Kieny said.
Kieny also said WHO hopes that "a few hundred thousand doses" of Ebola vaccine will be available by the end of the first half of 2015.
She refused to be more specific about numbers and emphasized that she was speaking about a hope, not a plan.
The trials will involve "several tens of thousands" of subjects -- perhaps 20,000 to 30,000 -- she said.
The beginning of the trials is being moved up to December, from January, because of a "massive effort to make this happen," Kieny said.
WHO is not ruling out the possibility of mass Ebola vaccinations in the first half of 2015, but three conditions would have to be met, Kieny said Friday.
They are: a safe and effective vaccine would have to be found; the scale of the outbreak would have to be sufficient to justify mass vaccinations; and enough doses would have to be available for mass vaccination.
WHO announced earlier this month that vaccine trials were expected to begin in West Africa in January.

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