May 7, 2025
Africa News

Ebola outbreak turns deadly in Uganda

The World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities said Tuesday that the Congolese boy had traveled from Congo on Sunday and entered Uganda with his family and sought medical care.The other two confirmed cases are the boy's 3-year-old brother and his grandmother, 50. They are being treated under isolation at the Bwera Hospital Ebola Treatment Unit, in the west of Uganda, the country's Ministry of Health said.In a tweet Wednesday, WHO said the boy had died Tuesday night."The young patient – 5- year-old index case of #Ebola died last night. Two more samples were sent to UVRI and have tested positive. We, therefore, have three confirmed cases of #Ebola in #Uganda," the tweet said, referring to the Uganda Virus Research Institute.The ministry added that eight people who had been in contact with the family were being traced. The Congo outbreak is both the second largest and second deadliest Ebola outbreak in history. More than 1,300 people have died since it began in August. The epicenter is in North Kivu and Ituri provinces, among the most populous in the Congo and bordering Uganda, Rwanda and South Sudan.Concern had been mounting that the infectious disease would cross the border, underscored by an increase in the number of cases in recent weeks.This photo released by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) shows the treatment unit where the confirmed and suspected cases of Ebola are being treated Wednesday, June 12, 2019 at Bwera hospital, Kasese District, in western Uganda near the border with Congo.

Pressure on WHO to declare international emergency

Dr. Jeremy Farrar, director of Wellcome Trust, a UK medical research charity, said that while Uganda was well-prepared to cope with the disease, global health authorities should be ready for more cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo and other neighboring countries. It might take 2 more years to contain Congo Ebola outbreak, WHO official says"This epidemic is in a truly frightening phase and shows no sign of stopping anytime soon," he said in a statement. "There are now more deaths than any other Ebola outbreak in history, bar the West Africa Epidemic of 2013-16, and there can be no doubt that the situation could escalate towards those terrible levels."Uganda's Health Ministry said that the boy and his grandmother had been vomiting blood, a severe symptom of Ebola, when they had presented themselves to doctors."Ebola is a horrific illness that ravages the human body," said Brechtje van Lith, Save the Children's country director in Uganda. "This first death, of a child, is a sickening reminder of the dangers of this disease."WHO is likely to come under pressure to declare the outbreak an international health emergency. In April, the health body said it did not constitute a "public health emergency of international concern."Read More – Source

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