99 in Uganda quarantined after Marburg virus death
From Samson Ntale, for CNN, Re-posted by Abdulgafar Abdulrauf Adio (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com)
Kampala, Uganda -- (CNN) -- Three days after a fatal case of Marburg hemorrhagic fever was diagnosed in Uganda, 99 people have been quarantined in four different locations across the East African country, as field epidemiologists and surveillance officers continue to closely monitor all people who got into contact with only victim.
Kampala, Uganda -- (CNN) -- Three days after a fatal case of Marburg hemorrhagic fever was diagnosed in Uganda, 99 people have been quarantined in four different locations across the East African country, as field epidemiologists and surveillance officers continue to closely monitor all people who got into contact with only victim.
More than 60 health workers form the bulk of people under quarantine after they were identified as having contact with a 30-year old male health worker who died September 28 of Marburg -- an Ebola-like hemorrhagic fever.
"As of today, a total of
99 contacts are under follow up. All the contacts are still in a healthy
condition," Dr. Jane Ruth Aceng, director general for health services
in Uganda, said in the latest update on the outbreak on Tuesday.
"The National Taskforce
through the field epidemiologists and surveillance officers continues to
closely monitor all people who got into contact with this confirmed
case," she noted.
The dead health worker
was a radiographer in a hospital in the capital of Kampala and also at
Mpigi District Health Center IV, places where authorities say he made
contact with colleagues.
Aceng revealed that at
least 11 people have tested negative after results from Uganda Virus
Research Institute (UVRI) indicate that although the suspects had
developed signs and symptoms similar to that of the disease, they did
not contract the virus.
Photos: Ebola outbreak in West Africa
"However, for those who continue to have signs, tests will be run again after three days," Dr. Aceng said.
Among those who tested
negative include are the brother of the deceased; two health workers
from a children HIV/AIDS hospital; seven persons from Mpigi Health
Center IV; and two relatives of the deceased who participated in the
burial.
"When he felt ill on
September 17, he traveled back to Mpigi for treatment since he felt more
comfortable with a facility that he had worked with for a long time, a
duration the disease was spread," said a statement by health authorities
last Sunday.
Marburg virus was first
identified in 1967, when 31 people became sick in Germany and Yugoslavia
in an outbreak that was eventually traced back to laboratory monkeys
imported from Uganda. Since then the virus has appeared sporadically,
with just a dozen outbreaks on record, many -- including the current
situation -- involving just a single patient.
Marburg virus causes
symptoms similar to Ebola, beginning with fever and weakness and often
leading to internal or external bleeding, organ failure and death. The
death rate runs as high as 80 percent, although it was significantly
lower in the initial outbreak when patients were cared for in relatively
modern, European hospitals.
The most recent outbreak, also in Uganda, in 2012, killed four out of 15 patients, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
On Tuesday, CDC Director
Thomas Frieden pointed to the most recent Marburg case as an example of
how a deadly virus could be contained.
"We've done important
work in Uganda to help the Ugandans better have a laboratory network so
they can find cases, have a response network with disease detectives who
can follow up and have an emergency operations center to trace
individual cases," Frieden said.
The extensive contact
tracing included tracking an embalmer back to Kenya, where he was tested
and found not to be infected with Marburg.
"I mention this, because
oftentimes in public health, what gets noticed is what happens and it's
hard to see what doesn't happen," Frieden continued, noting that there
have so far been no additional cases. "That may not make headlines, but
it does give us confidence that we can control Ebola in West Africa."
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