Africa CDC says Uganda's Ebola outbreak is coming under control
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[January 05, 2023]
(Reuters) - Africa's top public health body said on Thursday that
the Ebola outbreak in Uganda was coming under control, as it had been 39
days since the last confirmed case of the virus had been reported in the
country.
Officials first confirmed the outbreak in September and said it was the
Sudan strain of the disease, for which there is no proven vaccine.
Last month Uganda discharged its last known Ebola patient from hospital
and President Yoweri Museveni lifted all Ebola-related movement
restrictions, reflecting progress curbing the spread of the virus.
The Africa CDC's acting director, Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, told a briefing
that if no new cases were reported in Uganda by Jan. 10 then the
outbreak would be over.
He praised the Ugandan government's excellent coordination of
Ebola-containment measures, saying it had taken around 70 days to bring
the outbreak under control with 142 confirmed cases and 55 deaths.
Vaccine trials against the Sudan strain of Ebola were ongoing, Ouma
added.
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An anti-Ebola advocacy van drives along
Kyadondo road amid the Ebola outbreak and alert in Kampala, Uganda
October 27, 2022. REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa
African health authorities have made
a concerted effort to boost their readiness to respond to Ebola
following a devastating outbreak of the Zaire strain of the disease
in West Africa in 2014-2016 that killed 11,300 people, mostly in
Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
Ebola causes vomiting, bleeding and diarrhoea and spreads via
contact with bodily fluids of the infected. The virus can sometimes
linger in the eyes, central nervous system and bodily fluids of
survivors and flare up years later.
The World Health Organisation says a country needs to pass 42 days -
twice the maximum incubation period - after the last confirmed case
for it to be declared Ebola-free.
(Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Alexander Winning, William
Maclean)
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