Congo
and WHO investigate possible Ebola outbreak
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[July 03, 2015]
KINSHASA (Reuters) - Health
officials in Democratic Republic of Congo are investigating a possible
outbreak of Ebola in a village about 270 km (170 miles) northeast of the
capital Kinshasa, the government and the World Health Organization (WHO)
said on Thursday.
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Health minister Felix Kabange said that response teams arrived in
Masambio, a village in Bandundu province, on Thursday to collect
samples for testing.
Kabange said that six hunters fell ill on Friday with symptoms of
Ebola including diarrhea, vomiting and bloody urine after killing an
antelope the day before that had been stumbling and was probably
sick. Four of the hunters have since died.
However, he said that none suffered from a fever, the earliest and
most common symptom of the disease, suggesting that they may have
suffered only from food poisoning.
The samples would return to Kinshasa for testing either Thursday
night or Friday morning, Kabange said. But he cautioned that it
would be too early to render a definitive judgment since the
disease's typical incubation period is between seven and 15 days.
Congo has seen periodic outbreaks of the disease, which since
December 2013 has killed more than 11,200 people in Liberia, Sierra
Leone and Guinea in the worst Ebola epidemic on record.
A three-month outbreak that killed 49 people late last year in the
remote forests of northwestern Congo was not related to the West
African epidemic.
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The outbreak in Congo was thought to have started when a hunter
brought home an infected bush animal carcass.
Eugene Kabambi, a WHO spokesman in Congo, said teams from his
organization had been dispatched to Masambio but emphasized that
Ebola was only one possibility.
(Reporting By Aaron Ross; Editing by Joe Bavier and Angus MacSwan)
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