Practicing good hand hygiene is an effective method of preventing the spread of Ebola virus. Proper hand hygiene means washing hands often with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
While in an area affected by Ebola virus, one should avoid:
• Contact with blood and body fluids (such as urine, feces, saliva, sweat, vomit, breast milk, semen and vaginal fluids)
• Items that may have contact with an infected persons blood or body fluids (such as clothes, bedding, needles, and medical equipment)
• Funeral or burial rituals that require handling the body of someone who died from EVD
• Contact with bats and nonhuman primates or blood, fluids, and raw meat prepared from these animals, or meat from an unknown source
To date, at least four different vaccines have been developed against the Zaire Ebola virus, with some of them showing promising protective effects of up to a year after vaccination. Recently, UNICEF, WHO, IFRC, and MSF have established a stockpile of one of these vaccines, the rVSV∆G-ZEBOV-GP vaccine, for use in Ebola outbreaks.