Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Uganda declares itself free of Ebola-like virus

Kampala - Ugandan health officials on Tuesday declared the country
free of the Ebola-like Marburg virus after completing a 42-day
surveillance period under World Health Organization (WHO) rules.

"The country is officially declared free of the Marburg virus
epidemic," senior health ministry official Sarah Achieng Opendi said in
a statement.

A 30-year-old medical technician died from Marburg on September 28,
11 days after falling ill in a Kampala hospital where he worked,
sparking alarm.

A total of 197 people were monitored, including eight who had
symptoms, but none had the virus.

"Since then, there have been no Marburg cases reported in the
country, this implies that the Marburg outbreak in the country has
completely been controlled," Opendi added.

The Marburg virus is one of the most deadly known pathogens. Like
Ebola, it causes severe bleeding, fever, vomiting and diarrhoea and
has a 21-day incubation period.
Like Ebola, the Marburg virus is also transmitted via contact with
bodily fluids and fatality rates range from 25 to 80 percent.

The Ebola outbreak has claimed almost 5,000 lives in west Africa since
the beginning of the year.
A Marburg outbreak in Uganda in October 2012 killed 10 people.

- AFP

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