Thankfully there has been no recored coronavirus cases in Sierra Leone yet this section will be updated if there are any in the future.
These are some of the genereic questions regarding the coronavirus outbreak in Sierra Leone.
At the moment there are 0 reported cases of people infected with the coronavirus in Sierra Leone.
0 people are reported to have recovered from the coronavirus in Sierra Leone.
There has been 0 deaths of people with the coronavirus in Sierra Leone.
There have been no reported cases of coronavirus recorded in Sierra Leone so it is perfectly dafe for you to travel to Sierra Leone however please take caution and wash your hands at every opportunity.
Yes. The likelihood of an infected person contaminating commercial goods that have been sent from Sierra Leone is very low and the risk of catching the virus that causes COVID-19 from a package that has been moved, travelled, and exposed to different conditions and temperature is also very low.
During a Morse College Tea called “A Tale of Two Outbreaks,” Dr. Eugene Richardson — a Harvard professor of global health and social medicine — emphasized the importance of examining the social and historical dynamics of epidemics. The tea was held on Feb. 26 and attended by students and faculty. They listened intently as Richardson […]
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says it is working closely with its...
A World Bank bond designed to deliver funding to help the world’s poorest countries to tackle
Their continent has so far only registered two coronavirus cases, but sub-Saharan African governments are looking to their experience with Ebola as they prepare their fragile public systems for out...
“Ebola knocked us over, but now we know not to underestimate anything; we know how important it is to prepare.”
In 2014, an Ebola outbreak stormed West Africa, leaving more than 11,000 dead mainly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone and also reaching Nigeria and Mali.
Their continent has so far only registered two coronavirus cases, but sub-Saharan African governments are looking to their experience with Ebola as they prepare their fragile public systems for outbreaks of the new virus. Confronted with multiple diseases -- malaria, cholera, measles, as well as Ebola -- most African countries are struggling with fragile public healthcare systems.