The cases marked the first time the virus has crossed an
international border since the current outbreak began in Congo last
August. The epidemic has already killed 1,390 people in eastern
Congo.
The family sent home on Thursday had crossed from Congo to Uganda
earlier this week and sought treatment when a 5-year-old boy became
unwell. He died of Ebola on Tuesday. His 50-year-old grandmother,
who was accompanying them, died of the disease on Wednesday, the
ministry said.
They were the first confirmed deaths in Uganda in the current Ebola
outbreak.
The dead boy's father, mother, 3-year-old brother and their
6-month-old baby, along with the family's maid, were all
repatriated, the minister's statement said.
The 3-year-old has been confirmed to be infected with Ebola. His
23-year-old Ugandan father has displayed symptoms but tested
negative, Ugandan authorities said.
"Uganda remains in Ebola response mode to follow up the 27 contacts
(of the family)," the statement said.
Three other suspected Ebola cases not related to the family remain
in isolation, the ministry said.
The viral disease spreads through contact with bodily fluids,
causing hemorrhagic fever with severe vomiting, diarrhea and
bleeding.
UGANDA PRECAUTIONS
Authorities in neighboring Uganda and South Sudan have been on high
alert in case the disease spreads.
On Thursday, Uganda banned public gatherings in the Kasese district
where the family crossed the border. Residents are also taking
precautions, local journalist Ronald Kule told Reuters.
"They are a little alarmed now and they realize that the risk of
catching Ebola is now real," he said.
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"Hand washing facilities have been put in place, with washing
materials like JIK (bleach) and soap. There's no shaking of hands,
people just wave at each other."
At the border, health workers checked lines of people and isolate
one child with a raised temperature, a Reuters journalist said.
Uganda has already vaccinated many frontline health workers and is
relatively well prepared to contain the virus.
The World Health Organization (WHO) sent 3,500 doses of a Merck
experimental vaccine to Uganda this week, following 4,700 initial
doses.
Dr. Mike Ryan, head of WHO's emergencies program, said that he
expected Uganda to approve the use of experimental therapeutic drug
treatments, to be shipped "in coming days".
Monitoring and vaccination had been stepped up, but there had been
"no panic reaction" so far to the cases there.
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 attacked nearly 200 times this year in
conflict-hit eastern Congo, the epicenter of the outbreak.
(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Writing by Omar Mohammed and
Katharine Houreld; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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