First
reported deaths in Congo Ebola outbreak came in January: WHO
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[May 10, 2018] KINSHASA
(Reuters) - Cases of hemorrhagic fever were reported in an area of Congo
that is facing an Ebola epidemic as far back as December and the first
deaths were reported in January, a spokesman for the World Health
Organization said in the capital Kinshasa on Thursday.
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The health ministry said on Tuesday that at least 17 people had died
in an area of northwestern Democratic Republic of Congo where health
officials have now confirmed an outbreak of Ebola, but did not give
a time frame. Only two cases have been confirmed, by a laboratory in
Kinshasa.
A timespan as long as five months since the first infection would be
alarming, since it would give the virus a head start in infecting a
lot more people before any action was taken to contain it.
This is the ninth time Ebola has been recorded in the vast, forested
central African nation since it was first identified near the
eastern Ebola river in the 1970s. It comes less than a year after an
outbreak which killed eight people.
"According to our early information, the cases have been reported
since December and the first deaths were reported in January, but
the link between the deaths and the epidemic has not yet been
established," WHO Congo spokesman Eugene Kabambi told Reuters.
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The health ministry said on Thursday it had dispatched a team of 12
experts to the area to try to trace new contacts of the disease,
identify affected villages and provide resources to combat the
epidemic.
Ebola is best known and most feared for the internal and external
bleeding it can cause in its victims, owing to damage done to blood
vessels. Victims often die of shock but symptoms can be vague,
including fever, muscle pain, diarrhea and nausea.
The worst Ebola epidemic in history ended in West Africa just two
years ago after killing more than 11,300 people and infecting 28,600
in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
(Reporting by Patient Ligodi; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing Editing
by Catherine Evans)
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