Second
Ebola patient dies in Uganda, two others in intensive
care
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[June 13, 2019]
By Elias Biryabarema
KAMPALA (Reuters) - A Congolese woman has
become the second patient in Uganda to die of Ebola since the virus
crossed the border from the Democratic Republic of Congo and two other
people remain in intensive care, a health ministry official said on
Thursday.
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The 50-year-old woman was the grandmother of a five-year-old boy who
died on Tuesday evening after crossing into Uganda with his family
from Congo, the ministry said.
"The grandmother also died last night," the official, Emmanuel
Ainebyona, told Reuters.
Ainebyona said the two other patients being kept in isolation were
the three-year-old brother of the dead boy and a 23-year-old Ugandan
man who displayed Ebola symptoms.
Test results for the 23-year-old are expected later on Thursday, he
said, adding that a total of 27 contacts are now being monitored.
Uganda has banned public gatherings in the Kasese district where the
patients are being treated, Ainebyona said.
The viral disease spreads through contact with bodily fluids,
causing hemorrhagic fever with severe vomiting, diarrhea and
bleeding.
The current Ebola epidemic began in August last year in eastern
Congo and has already infected at least 2,062 people, killing 1,390
of them. The infections in Uganda confirmed that the deadly outbreak
has spread for the first time beyond the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
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Uganda, which has been on high alert for a possible spread of Ebola
and has already vaccinated many frontline health workers, is
relatively well prepared to contain the virus.
The World Health Organization (WHO) is bringing in 3,500 additional
vaccines and will begin vaccinating more people on Friday.
The WHO has said it will reconvene an emergency committee on Friday
to decide whether the outbreak is an international public health
emergency and how to manage it.
Authorities have struggled to contain the disease partly because
health workers have been repeatedly attacked in conflict-ravaged
eastern Congo, the epicenter of the outbreak.
(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Writing by Omar Mohammed; Editing
by Gareth Jones)
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