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Monday, November 19, 2012

mourners snatched a body


In Uganda, The Daily Monitor reports that one more person succumbed to the Ebola virus yesterday, bringing the death toll in the latest outbreak of the hemorrhagic fever in the country, to five. The latest victim died in hospital 30 kilometres from the capital, Kampala.
In Luweero, a burial team set up by the District Ebola Task Force to ensure that bodies of those confirmed or suspected to have Ebola are handled and buried by a special team, yesterday narrowly escaped lynching by mourners who snatched a body from the local cemetery.
According the Luweero District disease surveillance officer, the mourners armed with clubs, sticks and stones accused the special burial team of violating Muslim burial rites by wrapping the dead body in a bag. They insisted on washing the body before burial as part of the Islamic rites.
The bodies of the deceased are regarded by medical experts as still infectious. The virus is normally transmitted through bodily fluids. http://allafrica.com/stories/201211191088.html?aa_source=acrdn-f3

Ebola outbreak

Published on Nov 18, 2012

Ministry of health intensifies efforts against Ebola



The ministry of health has dispatched a team to Luweero district after reports that there is an outbreak of Ebola.
3 people have so far died as a result of a strange disease that is suspected to be Ebola.
The permanent secretary at the ministry of health Dr. Asuman Lukwago says the findings will guide the ministry on how to proceed.
He however appeals to members of the public to report any suspected cases to the nearby health Centers.
The highly infectious disease presents with high grade fever and bleeding, head headache vomiting abdominal pain and kills in a short time.  http://www.weinformers.net/2012/11/18/ministry-of-health-intensifies-efforts-against-ebola/

Ebola: Red Cross mobilises volunteers for social mobilisation


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Written by Catherine Ntabadde   
Monday, 19 November 2012 04:57
The Uganda Red Cross Society has mobilised 20 volunteers to support Ministry of Health and Luweero District authorities in social mobilisation of communities in Nyimbwa Sub County against Ebola.

Four people have so far died due to the deadly hemorrhagic fever. The latest death is of a 29 year old woman, Halima Nakimbugwe who is said to have contracted the disease from her husband, a boda boda rider. The rider was the first person to die in the latest epidemic in Luweero district.

URCS Luweero Branch Focal Person Annet Nampiima over the weekend had an orientation with the volunteers engaged in the social mobilization.

The orientation focused on precautionary and safety measures, the messages to pass on to the communities. Isolation facilities have been set up at Nyimbwa Health IV and Bombo Hospital.  http://www.redcrossug.org/component/content/article/3-newsflash/395-ebola-red-cross-mobilises-volunteers-for-social-mobilisation.html

Kampala, Uganda-Emergency Message to U.S. Citizens


Emergency Message to U.S. Citizens

U.S. Embassy Kampala, Uganda
Emergency Message to U.S. Citizens
Ebola Outbreak in Uganda
November 16, 2012
This Emergency Message is to alert U.S. citizens residing and traveling in Uganda of an outbreak of Ebola virus.  On November 15, 2012, the Ugandan Ministry of Health confirmed 2 cases of Ebola Viral Hemorrhagic Fever in Luwero District.  Local media also reported on November 16 that a person in contact with one of the confirmed Ebola cases traveled to the Busoga region.  The Ugandan Ministry of Health, U.S. Centers  for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and international partners are investigating these cases to determine the extent of the outbreak and if additional cases are present.
The likelihood of contracting Ebola is considered extremely low unless there has been a direct contact with body fluids like saliva, urine, or blood of an infected person or animal or the body of someone who has died from the disease.  Since the virus spreads through direct contact with blood and other body secretions of an infected person, people living with and caring for Ebola patients are at a higher risk of becoming infected.
Over the past few months, the Government of Uganda has announced several different outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers, including current advisories regarding Ebola and Marburg.  The Embassy advises all American citizens to be aware of the potential of an outbreak in Uganda and to always follow health guidelines to minimize risk or exposure.  To obtain Travel Notices from the CDC, visit the CDC's website athttp://www.cdc.gov/travel or call the CDC at 1-404-639-3534 if dialing from overseas, or at 1-800-CDC-INFO (1-800-232-4636) if dialing from within the United States. 
For specific information on protecting yourself from Ebola viral hemorrhagic fever, the CDC has the following websites, and you are encouraged to read this information:
• Main resource page:     http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/spb/mnpages/dispages/ebola.htm
• Guidance for U.S. citizens living abroad:http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/spb/mnpages/dispages/ebola/abroad.htm
• Additional information:http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/spb/mnpages/dispages/ebola/qa.htm  http://kampala.usembassy.gov/em_11162012.html

Tension In Lyantonde As Suspected Ebola Victim Dies

A man displaying Ebola like symptoms has died and been buried by Lyantonde district health authorities. He died on Friday. http://ugandaradionetwork.com/a/story.php?s=47462

Ebola deaths at five as 40 are monitored



Officials of the Ebola task force bury the remains of Tom Kasente Njeregeza, a boda boda cyclist and resident of Kichwamba Village in Mpumudde Sub-county, Lyantonde District.
Officials of the Ebola task force bury the remains of Tom Kasente Njeregeza, a boda boda cyclist and resident of Kichwamba Village in Mpumudde Sub-county, Lyantonde District. Kasente died hours after he had exhibited Ebola-like symptoms and his blood samples have been taken for testing. PHOTO BY MALIK FAHD JJINGO. 
By Agatha Ayebazibwe, Dan Wandera and Samuel Kaweesa.
Task force mandated to bury Ebola victims looks on in disbelief as mourners grab dead body from them and threaten to lynch the team, insisting they must wash the corpse.

One more person succumbed to the Ebola virus yesterday, bringing the death toll in the latest outbreak of the dreaded haemorrhagic fever in the country to five.
The victim, a 29-year-old woman, died at Bombo Hospital, some 30 kilometres north of Kampala, where she was admitted on Tuesday last week.
Halima Nakimbugwe is said to have contracted the disease while nursing her husband, a boda boda rider, who was the first person to die in the latest epidemic in Luweero District.
Ministry of Health spokesperson Rukia Nakamatte, said Nakimbugwe died yesterday afternoon at Bombo Hospital, where results of the tests carried out confirmed that she had contracted Ebola.
Two other people confirmed to have been infected with the virus have been admitted to Mulago Hospital. Another 12 suspected to have been infected with the virus are also admitted to Mulago, while another six are at Bombo Hospital. “The number of confirmed Ebola patients remains the two admitted to Mulago Hospital, while the number of contacts has risen from 34 to 40. These are being monitored both in Kampala and Bombo,” Ms Nakamatte said.
Another suspect, this time from Mbarara, was also admitted to Mulago yesterday after he presented signs of the Ebola fever. His blood samples have been taken for tests and results are expected soon.
In Luweero, a burial team set up by the District Ebola Task Force to ensure that bodies of those confirmed or suspected to have Ebola are handled and buried by a special team, yesterday narrowly escaping lynching by mourners who snatched a body from the Nakatonya Muslim Cemetery in Bombo Town Council.
According the Luweero District disease surveillance officer, Mr Richard Kawenyera, the mourners armed with clubs, sticks and stones accused the special burial team of violating Muslim burial rites by wrapping the dead body in a bag. They insisted on washing the body before burial as part of the Islamic rites.
“We are worried because we do not know what happened afterwards. The blood sample was taken to the Uganda Virus Research Institute and the results had not been received to confirm whether or not he died of Ebola. If a positive result turns up, these people will have touched the body of an Ebola victim,” Mr Kawenyera said on Saturday.
The Luweero District Health Officer, Dr Joseph Okware, said the man’s body had been taken to the Nyimbwa Health Centre IV by relatives, after he was found dead in a store at Ndejje University on Friday.
“They wanted us to ascertain the cause of death since he is a resident of Kakute Village in Nyimbwa Sub-county, where there has been an Ebola outbreak. We handled the case carefully until we got information that the mourners had grabbed the body from our team.”
A special isolation centre for both the suspected and confirmed cases is being set up with the support from the Medecines Sans Frotiers, at Nyimbwa Health Centre IV, where patients are expected to be transferred to from Bombo Military Hospital on Monday (today).
In Nakasongola District, traditional healers have been banned from admitting patients whom they do not know following the Ebola outbreak which has claimed two lives in the neighbouring Luweero District.
This follows reports that an Ebola patient from Luweero may have been rushed to one of the traditional medicine men’s shrines in Nakasongola before she died. This has sparked off panic among local residents.  http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Ebola-deaths-at-five-as-40-are-monitored/-/688334/1623488/-/5irw9nz/-/index.html

Ebola Claims Another Life


Five people in Uganda have so far died from the latest outbreak of Ebola after another patient succumbed to the virus yesterday.
The latest victim, a 29-year-old woman, died at Bombo Hospital, near Luweero, where she was admitted on Tuesday last week.
Halima Nakimbugwe is said to have contracted the disease while nursing her husband, a boda-boda rider, who was the first person to die in the most recent outbreak in the country, in Luweero District, 70kms from the Capital – Kampala.
Ministry of Health spokesperson Rukia Nakamatte, said Nakimbugwe died yesterday afternoon at Bombo Hospital, where results of the tests carried out confirmed that she had contracted Ebola.
Two other people confirmed to have been infected with the virus have been admitted to Mulago Hospital. Another 12 suspected to have been infected with the virus are also admitted to Mulago, while six are at Bombo Hospital.
“The number of confirmed Ebola patients remains the two admitted to Mulago Hospital, while the number of contacts has risen from 34 to 40. These are being monitored both in Kampala and Bombo,” Ms Nakamatte said.
Another suspect from Mbarara was also admitted to Mulago yesterday after he presented signs of the Ebola fever. His blood samples have been taken for tests and results are expected soon. http://www.redpepper.co.ug/?p=2378

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Emergence two new for bird flu Menoufia

The Director of the Directorate of Veterinary Medicine Menoufia, Sunday afternoon, the discovery بؤرتين two new bird flu house all of the success of Mohammed Jibril, Ali Hassan Eid بأشمون.explained Director of the Directorate of Veterinary Medicine, has been taken it samples from birds for analysis through campaigns organized by the Directorate villages and centers of the province, and the samples were the result positively infection, and it is currently being executed and buried health through with clearing houses, and take a sample of her contacts analyzed to make sure the illness or not. http://gate.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/5/35/273553/%D9%85%D8%AD%D8%A7%D9%81%D8%B8%D8%A7%D8%AA/%D8%A3%D8%AE%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B1-%D9%88%D8%AA%D9%82%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%B1/%D8%B8%D9%87%D9%88%D8%B1-%D8%A8%D8%A4%D8%B1%D8%AA%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%AC%D8%AF%D9%8A%D8%AF%D8%AA%D9%8A%D9%86-%D9%84%D9%85%D8%B1%D8%B6-%D8%A5%D9%86%D9%81%D9%84%D9%88%D9%86%D8%B2%D8%A7-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B7%D9%8A%D9%88%D8%B1-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D9%86%D9%88%D9%81%D9%8A%D8%A9.aspx

Two more Ebola cases confirmed

Nurses prepare an isolation facility at Nyimbwa Health Centre in Luweero District recently.

Nurses prepare an isolation facility at Nyimbwa Health Centre in Luweero District recently

 Sunday, November 18  2012 at  02:00

Panic reported at the different health centres in Luweero, with several patients reportedly abandoning health facilities, while medical personnel claim they have not received protective gear.
Blood samples sent to the Uganda Virus Research Institute, Entebbe by Luweero District medical department have confirmed two more Ebola positive patients, bringing the number to four, including the two who passed away last week.

The Luweero District Health Officer, Mr Joseph Okware, said blood samples for a patient admitted to Bombo Army General Hospital on Monday, have tested positive with Ebola Sudan strain and another patient who was in close contact with one of the victims and is now admitted to Mulago National Referral Hospital, has also been confirmed Ebola positive.
We are also sending more blood samples for five people whom we suspect came in contact with some of the victims. We also have a confirmation that the woman who had crossed to Jinja yet she is a key contact person has been intercepted by the medical teams,” Dr Okware said.
Panic has been reported at the different health centres in Luweero, with several patients reportedly abandoning the health units while the medical personnel claim they have not received protective gear.
“It would be very important that the lives of the health workers are also secure because our units have not closed,” a nurse at Bamunanika Health Centre III who did not want her names mentioned, said.
However, Dr Okware said while the main focus was on the facilities at Bombo Military Hospital, Kasana Health Centre IV and Nyimbwa Health Centre, the other units, would also be taken care of.
“We are still receiving some of the protective gear,” Mr Oware said. Meanwhile, the Isolation centre for suspected and confirmed Marburg virus patients at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital has been reopened with one admission; two days after health officials announced its closure.
Sister Eugenia Namulindwa, the officer in-charge of the Isolation unit, said yesterday Mr Edward Mwesigye, 28, from Rugaaga Sub-county in Isingiro District was admitted on Friday. 
“He was bleeding from ears, vomiting blood and passing urine with blood. We took his blood samples for testing,” she said.  
http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Two-more-Ebola-cases-confirmed/-/688334/1622794/-/12yj2ee/-/index.html

three deaths in Luwero District


The new outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever which broke out in Uganda in mid-November has been three deaths in Luwero District, north of Kampala, said Saturday the World Health Organization (WHO) .
"Four cases, three deaths have been reported," says the Geneva-based organization said in a statement.
In addition, seven people who had close contact with these cases developed symptoms and were placed in isolation, says the WHO, under otherwise the figures have been provided by the Ministry of Health in Uganda.
Ugandan authorities, WHO and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has sent a team to conduct a preliminary investigation on the new epidemic.
In connection with this new epidemic, WHO does not recommend any restrictions to travel or trade with Uganda.
No proven link with the epidemic of July
On 4 October, the Ugandan authorities had declared officially ended a previous Ebola outbreak, which was declared in July in the west and had killed 17 people.
Ugandan health officials said there was now no indication of a link between the two outbreaks. http://www.jeuneafrique.com/Article/DEPAFP20121118112550/oms-ouganda-msf-ebolanouvelle-epidemie-d-ebola-en-ouganda.html

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Uganda Ebola Outbreak Migrating: 2 New Deaths Reported in Luweero, 35 Miles from the Capital, Kampala


Uganda Ebola Outbreak Migrating: 2 New Deaths Reported in Luweero, 35 Miles from the Capital, Kampala

A new outbreak of the deadly ebola virus has hit Uganda once again.
Sources in the Uganda Health Ministry confirmed today that 2 more people had died from the uncurable disease, both from the same family, in the small town of Luweero, a mere 35 miles Northwest of the capital city, Kampala.
A third man has also died in Luweero last month, but no cultures were taken and the incident had not been reported properly to Ugandan Health Ministry Officials.... http://guardianlv.com/2012/11/uganda-ebola-outbreak-migrating-2-new-cases-reported-in-luweero-35-miles-from-the-capital-kampala/

Luweero Asks For UGX 716M to Fight Ebola Outbreak

Luweero local government have petitioned the ministry of Health and agencies for 716 million shillings to help fight the deadly Ebola Sudan Virus. http://ugandaradionetwork.com/a/story.php?s=47450

Declaration of H5N1 avian influenza in four districts

Thanh Hoa:

Updated at: 17:24 17/11/2012


(Inspector) - Vice Chairman Nguyen Duc Rights signed Decision No. 3726/QD- UBND on the declaration of the H5N1 avian influenza in poultry in villages Phuc Lai, Dinh Hoa commune, Yen Dinh District; village 2, Lien Loc and 8, Hoa Loc, Hau Loc district; Republic village of Great Compassion, sub-Dong Hoa district, the town of Nong Cong; rural villages, Van Thang Commune, Nong Cong; village 6 , Russian Thang, Nga Son district. 
The decision stated that from now slaughtering activities, transportation, consumption and processing of poultry, livestock veterinary back to normal operation in accordance with the Veterinary Ordinance and the provisions of law current. Thanh Hoa Provincial People's Committee asked the Director of Agriculture and Rural Development, Department of Animal Health, Chairman of the District: Yen Dinh, Hau Loc, Agriculture and Russia Son monitoring, management closely disease of livestock, especially poultry in the old service; strictly implement the sanitation disinfection, surveillance, detection, reporting, timely handling of cases of disease recurrence . http://www.thanhtra.com.vn/tabid/77/newsid/61276/temidclicked/34/seo/Cong-bo-het-dich-cum-gia-cam-H5N1-tai-4-huyen/Default.aspx

Fresh Ebola outbreak burdens health system



REPORT
from IRIN
PKAMPALA, 15 November 2012 (IRIN) - Uganda's Ministry of Health says a fresh outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever - the second in the country this year - is straining an already over-stretched health system.
"An outbreak of this nature poses a serious financial and human resource challenge. Our resources have been strained since July. We need additional resources to handle the current outbreak. What we have at hand is not enough," Dennis Lwamafa, the acting director-general of health Services at the Ministry of Health, told IRIN.
"With the increasing epidemic outbreaks and their frequencies, we are further constrained... The costs to manage this outbreak cause a distortion... We had not planned for it."
As of 12 November, three people - all members of the same family - were suspected to have died from Ebola in Luwero District, 50km northwest of Kampala. Five people who had close contact with the deceased are also suspected to have contracted the disease; two of these are in an isolation unit at Mulago National Referral Hospital in the capital, Kampala, two in health centres in Luwero and one at Bombo Military Hospital, 30km north of the capital. The Ministry of Health has begun tracing people who may have had contact with the deceased and those infected.
On 15 November, Uganda's Daily Monitor newspaper reported the death of a man who had presented with symptoms characteristic of Ebola at a health centre in the northwestern district of Koboko.
Sudan strain
The outbreak comes less than two months after the country was declared Ebola-free following an outbreak in July that killed 17 people in the western district of Kibaale. The virus in Luwero is the same strain - Ebola Sudan - as the Kibaale outbreak, according to the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI). The Sudan strain was responsible for an outbreak that infected more than 400 and killed some 220 people in Uganda in 2000 and one person in Luwero in May 2011.
The country is also battling an outbreak of Marburg - a viral haemorrhagic fever similar to Ebola - which has killed eight people in the southwest.
Ebola, which causes fever and bleeding from orifices, can cause death within days. There is no cure or vaccine for it, so efforts are concentrated on stopping its spread.
"We need more financial resources to put [in place] optimal response plans to contain this highly infectious disease," Lwamafa said. "We need doctors, nurses to manage isolation units, surveillance teams to list, monitor and track the contacts, laboratory technicians to take the specimens for testing, burial, mobilization teams and psychosocial support teams to handle trauma."
The UN World Health Organization (WHO) in Uganda has dispatched a team of experts to Luwero to help in surveillance, case management, health education, epidemiology, laboratory, infection control and psychosocial services, according to Miriam Nanyunja, WHO's adviser on disease prevention and control.
"The response is being mounted to effectively contain the outbreak," she told IRIN.
Christine Ondoa, Uganda's minister of health, has appealed to the public to remain calm, take precautions to prevent contracting the virus and avoid public gatherings in the affected district.  http://reliefweb.int/report/uganda/fresh-ebola-outbreak-burdens-health-system

Recent Ebola videos


Friday, November 16, 2012

Scores isolated after new Ebola outbreak in Uganda



KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — Scores of Ugandans were isolated on Thursday to prevent the spread of a new outbreak of Ebola which has already killed three people.
Uganda has experienced increasingly regular outbreaks of deadly hemorrhagic fevers that have left health officials grappling for answers.
The new Ebola outbreak was confirmed Wednesday in a district 60 kilometers (40 miles) from the Ugandan capital, Kampala. The outbreak comes roughly a month after Uganda declared itself Ebola-free following an earlier outbreak in a remote district of western Uganda. Last month at least five people in a southwestern district of Uganda were killed by Marburg, a hemorrhagic fever similar to Ebola.
The latest Ebola outbreak, officials say, is of the Sudan strain of Ebola and not linked to the previous one, of the Congo variety, which killed at least 16 villagers in July and August in the western district of Kibaale. In addition to the three dead in the latest outbreak, up to 15 are being monitored for signs of the disease, officials said. They advised against panic after it was revealed that two possible Ebola patients had since checked into Kampala's main referral hospital.
"The Ministry of Health once again calls upon the public to stay calm as all possible measures are being undertaken to control the situation," Christine Ondoa, Uganda's minister of health, said.
Ebola is especially feared in Uganda, where multiple outbreaks have occurred over the years, and news of it can cause patients to flee hospitals to avoid infection. In 2000, in one of the world's worst Ebola outbreaks, the disease infected 425 Ugandans and killed more than half of them in the country's north. Another outbreak in 2007 killed 37 people in Bundibugyo, a remote district close to the Congolese border.
Ebola is highly infectious and kills quickly.
Denis Lwamafa, the director-general of health services in Uganda's Ministry of Health, suggested that there were more reported cases of Ebola in Uganda than other countries because "our diagnostic capability" has increased. But a World Health Organization official in Kampala said there were progressively more cases of Ebola because of an increase in "the interaction between man and the forests."
Investigators believe the first victim of Ebola in any outbreak acquires the disease after coming into contact with a "reservoir," an infected animal that is often a monkey.
"Whenever there is contact between man and the reservoir of Ebola then you get the first case," said Miriam Nanyunja of the World Health Organization.
Ebola was first reported in 1976 in Congo and is named for the river where it was recognized. There is no cure or vaccine for it. Ebola is "characterized by fever, headache, joint and muscle aches, sore throat, and weakness, followed by diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach pain. A rash, red eyes, hiccups and internal and external bleeding may be seen in some patients," according to a factsheet by the U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The virus can be transmitted through direct contact with the blood or secretions of an infected person, or objects that have been contaminated with infected secretions. During communal funerals, for example, when the bereaved come into contact with an Ebola victim, the virus can be contracted, officials said, warning against unnecessary contact with suspected cases of Ebola.
Nanyunja of WHO said Ugandans near the Ebola epicenter should practice what she called "social distancing," avoiding things such as handshakes and similar contact.  http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5geepLywm5ASMnqwQl8W70SOAQ8Yw?docId=f81f2b7954154db3af6c36a54588fd86

NSW to Cull 50,000 Chickens Due to Bird Flu Hit in Hunter Valley


November 16, 2012 10:01 AM EST
Australia's woes with its farm animals raised for their meat appears to be unending. After 21,000 Australian sheep were culled in October in Pakistan over suspicions of bacterial contamination, another 50,000 chickens in New South Wales were quarantined this week by state authorities.
REUTERS/Scanpix Sweden
Bird flu attacked again in Bengal, India and it affected the birds in 13 villages of Nadia Tehatta I. According to the secretary of the ARD department, there are around 51,000 hens and ducks gathered within the affected area specifically around 3-km radius.  http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/405504/20121116/nsw-cull-50-000-chickens-due-bird.htm#.UKYsYYfpeDQ

3 more test positive to Ebola in Luweero




Publish Date: Nov 16, 2012


Three more residents of Nyimbwa in Luweero district have tested positive to the Ebola haemorrhagic fever.  
This brings the number of confirmed Ebola cases in the district since last month to six, three of whom have died.           
“The blood samples for three people which we sent yesterday have come out indicating they are also infected with Ebola,” Richard Kawenyera, the district Ebola surveillance officer, told Saturday Vision yesterday (Friday).           
Kawenyera did not divulge details about the patients saying he was too busy.           
But it is believed that they are related to the three members of the same family who died in Kakute sub-county, Sambu Parish, Nyimbwa sub-county...
http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/637350-3-more-test-positive-to-ebola-in-luweero.html

Growing concerns over 'in the air' transmission of Ebola


Canadian scientists have shown that the deadliest form of the ebola virus could be transmitted by air between species.
In experiments, they demonstrated that the virus was transmitted from pigs to monkeys without any direct contact between them.
The researchers say they believe that limited airborne transmission might be contributing to the spread of the disease in some parts of Africa.
They are concerned that pigs might be a natural host for the lethal infection.

Start Quote

What we suspect is happening is large droplets - they can stay in the air, but not long, they don't go far. But they can be absorbed in the airway”
Dr Gary KobingerPublic Health Agency of Canada
Ebola viruses cause fatal haemorrhagic fevers in humans and many other species of non human primates.
Details of the research were published in the journal Scientific Reports.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the infection gets into humans through close contact with the blood, secretions, organs and other bodily fluids from a number of species including chimpanzees, gorillas and forest antelope.
The fruit bat has long been considered the natural reservoir of the infection. But a growing body of experimental evidence suggests that pigs, both wild and domestic, could be a hidden source of Ebola Zaire - the most deadly form of the virus.
Now, researchers from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and the country's Public Health Agency have shown that pigs infected with this form of Ebola can pass the disease on to macaques without any direct contact between the species.
In their experiments, the pigs carrying the virus were housed in pens with the monkeys in close proximity but separated by a wire barrier. After eight days, some of the macaques were showing clinical signs typical of ebola and were euthanised.
One possibility is that the monkeys became infected by inhaling large aerosol droplets produced from the respiratory tracts of the pigs.
pigs could be a natural hostPigs could act as a host and amplify the Ebola virus
One of the scientists involved is Dr Gary Kobinger from the National Microbiology Laboratory at the Public Health Agency of Canada. He told BBC News this was the most likely route of the infection.
"What we suspect is happening is large droplets - they can stay in the air, but not long, they don't go far," he explained.
"But they can be absorbed in the airway and this is how the infection starts, and this is what we think, because we saw a lot of evidence in the lungs of the non-human primates that the virus got in that way."
The scientists say that their findings could explain why some pig farmers in the Philippines had antibodies in their system for the presence of a different version of the infection called Ebola Reston. The farmers had not been involved in slaughtering the pigs and had no known contact with contaminated tissues.
Dr Kobinger stresses that the transmission in the air is not similar to influenza or other infections. He points to the experience of most human outbreaks in Africa.
"The reality is that they are contained and they remain local, if it was really an airborne virus like influenza is it would spread all over the place, and that's not happening."
Hidden host
The authors believe that more work needs to be done to clarify the role of wild and domestic pigs in spreading the virus. There have been anecdotal accounts of pigs dying at the start of human outbreaks. Dr Kobinger believes that if pigs do play a part, it could help contain the virus.
"If they do play a role in human outbreaks it would be a very easy point to intervene" he said. "It would be easier to vaccinate pigs against Ebola than humans."
Ebola UgandaWorkers prepare to disinfect during a recent Ebola outbreak in Uganda
Other experts in the field were concerned about the idea that Ebola was susceptible to being transmitted by air even if the distance the virus could travel was limited. Dr Larry Zeitlin is the president of Mapp Biopharmaceuticals.
"It's an impressive study that not only raises questions about the reservoir of Ebola in the wild, but more importantly elevates concerns about ebola as a public health threat," he told BBC News. "The thought of airborne transmission is pretty frightening."
At present, an outbreak of ebola in Uganda has killed at least two people near the capital Kampala. Last month, Uganda declared itself Ebola-free after an earlier outbreak of the disease killed at least sixteen people in the west of the country.  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20341423

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Ebola from Pigs to Monkeys



A deadly Ebola virus can spread from pigs to monkeys without direct contact, pointing to pig farms as a possible contributor to Ebola outbreaks.
By  | November 15, 2012
Although Ebola viruses can cause fatal disease in humans and other primates, pigs can carry the infections with few ill effects. Now, Canadian scientists have shown that apparently healthy pigs can pass the deadliest species of Ebola to monkeys, even without ever coming into contact with them.
The study, published today (November 15) inScientific Reports, marks the first time that the virus has spread between different species in a lab experiment, and suggests that pig farms could be facilitate such species-hopping in more natural conditions.
However, Gary Kobinger from the University of Manitoba, who led the study, cautioned that “we still don’t know if pigs are playing any role in the natural transmission or ecology of Ebola virus in Africa.”
“An epidemiological survey of wild and domestic pigs in sub-Saharan Africa is now necessary,” agreed Shigeru Morikawa from the National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Japan, who was not involved in the research.
Ebola has been found in gorillas, chimps, duikers (a small a  http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/33277/title/Ebola-from-Pigs-to-Monkeys/

Suspect Ebola fever in Luweero-40 monitored


Suspect Ebola fever in Luweero

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The suspected deadly Ebola fever has been detected in Nyimbwa sub-county in Luweero district and two members of the same family have died. 
This latest incidence happened in Sombwe Parish about 40km north of Kampala.  Joseph Okware, the Luwero District Health Officer Wednesday confirmed that the dead are members of the same family.
He said Gladys Namakula and Rehemah Najjemba of Kikyusa village died and were buried on 10th and 12th respectively.

Authorities said that the two are said to having got the virus from their brother who had been admitted to the hospital in October.
It is now about two months after the country was declared Ebola free by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Okware said the deceased blood samples were taken to Uganda Virus Research Institute and tested. He said that other members of the family have been admitted at Bombo Military Hospital.
 

He said that 40 other people who were in close contact with the deceased are being closely monitored by the surveillance team from WHO, and Ministry of Health among others.
 

Residents said one other family member identified only as Kabugo, a boda boda rider in Bombo town council died on November 7, after presenting with symptoms of Ebola like vomiting, high fever, vomiting blood, and severe chest pain.
The ministry of health said that the ministry has sent a technical team to do surveillance work on ground. http://www.independent.co.ug/news/news/6816?task=view

Uganda: new outbreak of Ebola, 2 dead


Une zone de quarantaine de l'hôpital Mulago de Kampala où une personne est morte du virus Ebola, le 31 juillet 2012 en Ouganda AFP/Archives Michele Sibilonihttp://translate.google.com/translate?sl=fr&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.slateafrique.com%2F91997%2Febola-alerte-rouge-en-ouganda

Brief on the Marburg (Ebola) Out Break: Posted 14/11/12

http://health.go.ug/docs/Brief.pdf