Uganda confirms outbreak of Ebola in capital Kampala, one dead
Uganda has confirmed
an outbreak of the Ebola virus in the capital Kampala with the first confirmed
patient dying from it on Wednesday, the health ministry said on Thursday.
It is the East African
country's ninth outbreak since it recorded its first infection of the viral
disease in 2000.
The patient, a male
nurse at the Mulago National Referral Hospital in Kampala, had initially sought
treatment at various facilities, including Mulago, as well as with a
traditional healer, after developing fever-like symptoms.
"The patient
experienced multi-organ failure and succumbed to the illness at Mulago National
Referral Hospital on Jan. 29. Post-mortem samples confirmed the Sudan Ebola
Virus Disease (strain)," the ministry said in a statement.
Forty-four contacts of
the deceased man have been listed for tracing, including 30 health workers, the
ministry said.
However, contact
tracing could be challenging as Kampala, where the latest Ebola infection
cropped up, is a crowded city of over 4 million people and a crossroads for
traffic to South Sudan, Congo, Rwanda and other countries.
The highly infectious
hemorrhagic fever is transmitted through contact with infected bodily fluids
and tissue. Symptoms include headache, vomiting of blood, muscle pains and
bleeding.
Ugandan authorities
have used capacities built up over the years, such as laboratory testing, patient
care know-how, contact tracing and other skills, to bring recent Ebola
outbreaks under control in relatively short order.
The World Health
Organization said it had allocated $1 million from its contingency fund for
emergencies to support quick action to contain the outbreak.
The global health body
was also working with developers to send out candidate vaccines, it said in a
statement.
Uganda last suffered
an outbreak in late 2022 which killed 55 of the 143 people infected. That
outbreak was declared over on Jan. 11, 2023.
Vaccination against
Ebola for all contacts of the deceased will begin immediately, the ministry
said. There is currently no approved vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola,
though Uganda received some trial vaccine doses during the last outbreak.
An outbreak of
Marburg, a cousin of Ebola, was declared in neighbouring Tanzania
last week. Uganda also borders Rwanda, which has just emerged from a Marburg outbreak,
and Congo where outbreaks of Ebola are common.
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