Disturbing video footage has emerged from West Africa showing an Ebola victim who escaped from hospital walking through a busy market, sending hundreds of people fleeing in fear.

In scenes which show both the terror felt by residents in the disease zone and the struggle the authorities face containing the virus, the man can be seen lashing out angrily at anyone who tries to confront him.

Wearing a red shirt and marked with a tag telling people he has tested positive for Ebola, the patient is eventually surrounded by health workers wearing protective clothing and bundled into a waiting ambulance.

The incident took place in Monrovia, Liberia on Monday after the victim fled from doctors at the extremely overstretched Elwa hospital, whose Ebola unit is run by the international agency Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

Last month, it was reported that Elwa doctors were forced to turn away suspected Ebola victims because of overcrowding, while locals told reporters yesterday that victims complained they were not being fed.

The man in red can be seen wearing a white tag - showing he has tested positive for Ebola

He was confronted by health workers wearing protective clothing

The man walking through the market in the video can be seen picking up bread, and was described by witnesses as simply being in search of food.

Liberia is the worst-affected country at the heart of what is the worst Ebola outbreak ever recorded, accounting for almost 700 of the total 1,552 deaths.

The shocking footage then shows the man being bundled, clearly against his will, into an ambulance

The crowd can be heard cheering when the vehicle eventually leaves to take the victim back to hospital

There is no suggestion that things are going to get better soon, with the latest World Health Organisation update indicating that the outbreak is actually accelerating, despite international aid efforts.

In Liberia, food shortages and price inflation have been reported in areas where farmers are banned from tending to their crops for fear of the disease spreading further.