Uganda confirms one case of Ebola-like Marburg virus

Emergence of highly infectious virus raises fears of epidemic

Health workers, wearing head-to-toe protective gear, prepare for work outside an isolation unit in Foya District, Lofa County, Liberia in this July 2014 UNICEF handout photo. Handout via Reuters

KAMPALA:
Uganda has confirmed one case of Marburg virus, a highly infectious hemorrhagic fever similar to Ebola, the health minister said on Thursday.

Jane Ruth Aceng told reporters at a news conference in capital Kampala that the case, which led to a fatality, had been confirmed after a series of tests were carried out. The East African nation last suffered a Marburg outbreak, which has a high mortality rate, in 2014.

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Marburg is from the same family of viruses as Ebola, which killed thousands in West Africa in 2014. The victim, a 50-year old woman, died on October 11 at a hospital in eastern Uganda after "she presented with signs and symptoms suggestive of viral hemorrhagic fevers", the minister said. The woman had nursed her 42-year old brother who died on September 25 with similar signs and symptoms and also participated in cultural preparation of the body for burial, she added.

The brother had been "a hunter who carried out his activities where there are caves with heavy presence of bats," Aceng said. The African fruit bat is the reservoir host of the Marburg virus although infected bats do not show obvious signs of the disease.

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