Kenyan health workers screen travellers for the Ebola virus at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi on Thursday.

AFP

The Ebola outbreak in west Africa threatens to exact a severe economic toll, analysts said on Thursday, as stricken countries remained in lockdown and rushed to bolster emergency responses.

The shutting down of schools, borders and government services in the worst-affected countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone could have a "significant" financial impact on already impoverished nations, said Matt Robinson, senior credit officer at Moody's rating agency.

"The outbreak risks having a direct financial effect on government budgets via increased health expenditures that could be significant," he said in a statement.

Liberia, which has suffered more than 300 deaths from the virus, spent $12mn (9mn euros) tackling the Ebola outbreak between April and June, and looks set to spend much more in the coming weeks.

It began work to expand its Ebola treatment centre in the capital Monrovia on Thursday - one of only two centres in the country of 4.2mn.

"We need to increase the size of this place because more and more people arrive every day due to the awareness programme," Nathaniel Dovillie, head of the centre, said.

"The number of sick compared to the number of available places is a problem. We need more centres in Monrovia."

The only other Ebola treatment centre is in Foya in Lofa province, one of three areas in the north placed under quarantine earlier this week.

Increasingly draconian restrictions have also been put in place in Guinea, where the outbreak has killed at least 377.

President Alpha Conde declared a "health emergency" on Wednesday and ordered strict controls at border points and a ban on moving bodies "from one town to another until the end of the epidemic".

Moody's warned that a serious outbreak in Lagos, Africa's most populous city, could cause severe disruptions to the oil and gas industry as international companies evacuate staff and local operations are shut down - translating into "economic and fiscal deterioration".

The number of confirmed Ebola cases in Nigeria has risen by one to 11, Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu said on Thursday.

The figure includes three deaths and eight people who are being treated at a special isolation unit set up in Lagos, a megacity of more than 20mn people.

There are also fears that the virus could spread further afield. The World Health Organisation confirmed Kenya is a "high-risk" country on Wednesday due to its position as a transport hub for the continent.  

A number of airlines have cancelled flights in and out of west Africa. Gambia suspended all flights from Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to a transport ministry document obtained by AFP on Wednesday.

The death toll in the worst epidemic of Ebola since its discovery four decades ago climbed to 1,069 on Wednesday, according to the WHO which said 56 people had died in two days. Nearly 2,000 have now been infected.

Canada's Health Minister Rona Ambrose said between 800 to 1,000 doses of a vaccine called VSV-EBOV, which has shown promise in animal research but never been tested on humans, would be distributed through the WHO.

Hard-hit nations were also anxiously awaiting a consignment of up to 1,000 doses of the barely tested drug ZMapp from the US, which has raised hopes of saving hundreds infected with the disease.

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