The new outbreak of the Ebola virus is "unavoidable", but new vaccines and rapid response measures mean that the head of the World Health Organization says it will be more effective in stopping the problem.
The World Health Organization's criticism was too slow to grasp the seriousness of the epidemic.
The Guinean capital is committed to controlling individual events in community disease control. WHO Chief Executive Officer Margaret Chan announced in December 1992 that he was grateful to the Government of Guinea for its role in developing vaccines, but noted.
"Scientists do not know where Ebola is outbreaks, but almost all experts believe that another outbreak is inevitable," said Ebola virus response coordinator and politician.
"When this happens, the world will do better," added Chen Shui-bian.
In the main clinical trials using innovative "ring" or group methods, nearly 6,000 people in Guinea received a test vaccine in 2015, none of whom infected the disease.
Mr. Chen said that even with "initial limited" vaccines, health authorities have other "transcend isolation and quarantine" options.
For the first time in 1976, the current Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ebola virus outbreak of up to hundreds of cases, mainly in West Africa and East Africa outbreak.
However, at the beginning of 2014, a small number of infections in southern Guinea developed rapidly into an epidemic.
Mr. Chen stressed that another positive result of the Ebola crisis was a renewed focus on funding for other infectious diseases, including the deadly Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Lhasa and Nipa virus.
"These significant spill effects reinforce the collective threat of the world's emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases," she said.
In this event, President Alfa Kant also said that "Africa benefited from cutting-edge technology, especially in the biomedical sciences," and called on industrialized countries to share their expertise.