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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Airborne transmission of Ebola in pigs


Airborne transmission of Ebola

Duration: 
18 minutes
First broadcast:
 
Thursday 22 November 2012
Ebola Transmission
In the last few months there have been several outbreaks of the deadly Ebola virus in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the first time there have been so many in quick succession. Up until now, it has been thought that it is only spread through direct contact and bodily fluids. However new research now shows that the deadliest form of the disease infects pigs, and can also be spread through the air from pigs to monkeys. Dr Gary Kobinger from the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada is one of the scientists behind the findings. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p010jyvq  

Doctors Without Borders appeals to Uganda officials to confront the Ebola virus



He appealed to officials in the organization "Doctors Without Borders", Minister of Health of Uganda Christine Oondoa, the need to take the necessary measures to isolate infected (Ebola), who has returned once again to face the citizens, and that after a month and a half on the last plague, which killed 17 people in western Uganda.



Noteworthy that, the Ebola virus was first discovered in 1976 the Democratic Republic of Congo, which lies on its borders Uganda and there is as yet no vaccine for this virus, and the World Health Organization (WHO) has monitored 52 cases at the end of last October.


A symptom of this disease, very high temperatures, diarrhea, nausea and lack of efficient kidney and hepatitis, and bleeding, which is transmitted directly through blood, saliva and waste for people infected, and the virus finds a warehouse him in some animals, such as birds bats, which feeds on fruit The gorillas and chimpanzees, who live in tropical forests, as well as pigs, which stores the virus in the respiratory apparatus.



It should be noted, that Uganda suffered since the beginning of last October with another kind of virus, cause a rise in temperature and bleeding, which was discovered in the southwest on the border with Rwanda, a virus (Marburg), which resulted in the death of 8 people and wounding nine cases . http://shorouknews.com/news/view.aspx?cdate=22112012&id=0eaa443d-0925-449b-a22e-90487c12ec53

Ebola: Health centre suspends admissions


Construction of an isolation centre for Ebola cases at Nyimbwa Health Centre IV. PHOTO BY dan wandera.
Construction of an isolation centre for Ebola cases at Nyimbwa Health Centre IV. PHOTO BY dan wandera. 
By Dan Wandera
Posted  Wednesday, November 21  2012 at  02:00 Luweero
Nyimbwa Health Centre IV in Luweero District has stopped admitting patients due to inadequate space at the facility, which is preparing to receive confirmed and suspected Ebola virus cases.
According to Dr Innocent Nkonwa, the in-charge of the facility, the patients will, however, continue receiving treatment.
“We have not stopped treatment. The maternity wing is under renovation and those supposed to be admitted are being referred to our neighbouring facilities of Bombo Health Centre III and other units around the area,” Dr Nkonwa said, noting that they, however, have few people turning up due to the Ebola scare.
Meanwhile, the district Ebola task force and surveillance teams are reportedly overwhelmed by emergency calls from different health units to attend to patients with symptoms similar to that of the deadly hemorrhagic fever.
“Some of the cases are not really related to Ebola but there is panic and fear among health workers and the public. We are trying to respond to all these calls to ensure that the outbreak is handled and so we call upon the people to be calm but vigilant,” Dr Joseph Okware, the district health officer, said.
The number of confirmed Ebola cases has risen to six according to the latest results from the Uganda Virus Research Institute, while blood samples of 12 suspected cases have also been taken for testing.  http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Ebola--Health-centre-suspends-admissions/-/688334/1625214/-/s2doa9z/-/index.html

Health workers complain over protection


Dr Steven Kajaaya (R) takes blood samples from Tom Njerejeza of Kichwamba Village in  Lyantonde District.
Dr Steven Kajaaya (R) takes blood samples from Tom Njerejeza of Kichwamba Village in Lyantonde District. Njerejeza died of an illness with Ebola-like symptoms, last week.Health workers at Layntonde Hospital have appealed to the government to give them more protective gear. PHOTO BY ISSA ALIGA  Health workers at Lyantonde Hospital have expressed concern over the shortage of protective gear at the facility.
The health workers told the Daily Monitor on Tuesday that they were at risk of contracting Ebola, which broke out in Luweero District recently. The disease has killed five people in Luweero.
The complaint came shortly after a 30-year-old boda boda cyclist identified as Tom Njerejeza, of Kichwamba Village in Lyantonde District last week died from an illness with Ebola-like symptoms. Dr Steven Kajaaya, a health worker at Lyantonde Hospital, said the only protective gear was used during the burial of Njerejeza at Kichwamba Village.
No gear
“The only pair of Ebola protective gear were used and discarded. Right now, we don’t have any and the doctors are at risk should there be another Ebola incident that may occur,’’ Dr Kajaaya said. Dr Kajaaya called upon the government to give the hospital more protective gear.
Sensitisation
“We cannot risk our lives and we shall not attend to any other Ebola victim if we don’t have protective gear,’’ Dr Kajaaya said.The Lyantonde District Health Officer, Dr Okoth Obbo, said blood samples obtained from Njerejeza had been taken to the Central Health Public Laboratory in Wandegeya, Kampala for examination.
Dr Obbo added that they have started a joint community sensitisation exercise with local leaders to teach people how to prevent spread of Ebola.
The Lyantonde District chairperson, Mr Fred Muhangi, warned residents against shaking hands and hugging, saying such body contacts should be stopped until health experts come up with a report about the suspected outbreak of the virus in Lyantonde.  http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Health-workers-complain-over-protection/-/688334/1626268/-/n4lsvk/-/index.html

Lyantonde Blood Samples Test Negative For Ebola

Blood samples of person who died after displaying symptoms similar to Ebola in Lyantonde district have tested negative for the Ebola virus.

http://ugandaradionetwork.com/a/story.php?s=47611


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Ebola: Why Uganda is so prone News


In four months, the deadly viral haemorrhagic fevers have hit Uganda three times, killing at least 29 people in Uganda.
An ongoing outbreak of a different strain of Ebola, following previous attacks of Ebola and Marburg, raises the question why we are becoming so vulnerable to these viral attacks. First to be hit, in July, was the western district of Kibaale, where Ebola claimed 17 lives including 12 from the same family.
Hardly a week after authorities declared the country Ebola-free, Marburg, described by scientists as a ‘cousin of Ebola’, struck Kabale district. It later spread to Rukungiri, Mbarara and Ibanda districts killing at least seven lives. As the country was struggling to contain Marburg, a fresh Ebola outbreak was confirmed in Luweero last week.
So far, the Luweero Ebola outbreak has claimed five lives, while another five have tested positive for the deadly haemorrhagic fever. Explaining these attacks, health experts believe human beings are largely to blame. Dr Mariam Nanyonjo, the disease prevention advisor, at the World Health Organisation (WHO) Kampala office, blames increasing contact with wild animals.
“Monkeys and bats are the reservoirs for Ebola, and not all bats but fruit-eating bats,” she says.
Nanyonjo says there are many people are exposing themselves by encroaching on wildlife habitats, which host these viruses. Ugandans are also known to love bush meat, further raising the risk. And once a person contracts the virus, he/she passes it on to other humans they come into contact with.

Deforestation

According to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Old World fruit bats of the family Pteropodidae, are considered to be natural hosts for the Ebola and Marburg viruses. Dr Denis Lwamafa, commissioner for National Disease Control in the ministry of Health, blames the depletion of wild animals’ habitats, such as forests, for the outbreaks.
“Where we have had Ebola, the monkeys were coming into people’s homes and sharing food, and the bats were even staying in some houses after their habitats were destroyed and bushes cleared for farming in the cases of Luweero, Kibaale, and Bundibugyo, among other areas.” Dr Lwamafa says.
Dr Joaquim Saweka, WHO Country Representative to Uganda, believes increased exposure of humans to secretions from virus hosts like bats and monkeys makes us more susceptible to Ebola.
“In some areas, people eat fruits and foods that have already been part-eaten by bats, which is very dangerous,” he said.
Indeed, ecological studies done in Maramagambo forest after the first Marburg outbreak in Kamwenge in 2007 revealed that some bats and wild animals harboured the Marburg virus.
“People living near forests should take precautionary measures and avoid eating wild animals,” cautions Health Minister Christine Ondoa.

Link to pigs

Canadian scientists have shown that the deadliest form of the Ebola virus could be transmitted by air. Their experiments show that the virus was transmitted from pigs to monkeys without any direct contact between them.
The fruit bat has long been considered the natural reservoir of the infection. But recent research suggests that pigs, both wild and domestic, could be a hidden source of Ebola Zaire - the most deadly form of the virus.
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 monkeys were showing clinical signs typical of Ebola and were killed after the experiment. However, researchers believe that the airborne attacks never break out over large parts of Africa.

No treatment

This is the fourth major Ebola outbreak reported in Uganda in 12 years, including in 2000 (224 deaths) and 2007 in Bundibugyo (38 deaths). Although there is no known cure for the fevers, Ondoa says, patients can be treated for their symptoms to strengthen their resistance. As with previous cases, the ministry of Health is tracing and listing people that may have been exposed to suspected and confirmed cases.
Although the WHO is yet to advise a travel ban to Uganda, Ugandans travelling abroad may face difficulties; in July Saudi Arabia rejected Ugandan Muslim pilgrims to Mecca because of Ebola.  http://www.observer.ug/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=22228%3Aebola-why-uganda-is-so-prone-&catid=34%3Anews&Itemid=114

Ebola mistaken for witchcraft



Efforts to contain the deadly Ebola virus in Luweero district have received a major blow after some local residents and health officials disagreed on the outbreak. The ministry of Health has confirmed that four people have died and 11 others are admitted at Mulago Referral Hospital and Bombo General Military Hospital following the outbreak of the haemorrhagic fever. More than 40 people are also under monitoring in Luweero. Musisi Kitumba one of the residents, says that they are surprised that the disease is only spreading within one family of Ruth Nakanwagi.

The Luweero district Health Educator Luyombya Bwogi says that witchcraft allegations are dangerous because they water down efforts to contain the deadly virus.  http://www.touch.fm/index.php/news-stories/local-news

Kakute Primary School Closes Prematurely Over Ebola Outbreak

Kakute Church of Uganda Primary School in Luweero has been forced to close prematurely before the end of third term 2012 after reports of an Ebola outbreak in the area.  http://ugandaradionetwork.com/a/story.php?s=47503

Ebola in Luweero: No new deaths, 62 under surveillance.


Police stop visits to inmates over Ebola


Publish Date: Nov 20, 2012
The Police have halted visitation of inmates in all prisons across the city and neighbouring districts.

The move is aimed at curbing the spread of the deadly Ebola haemorrhagic fever among inmates and other people.


Addressing the media at a weekly Police briefing yesterday, Kampala Metropolitan Police spokesperson Ibin Ssenkumbi yesterday said the visitors will only be given access to the suspects if the reason is serious enough.

“We hereby call upon friends, relatives and sympathisers of suspects to refrain from visiting them in the meantime because they will not be allowed to meet them (suspects),” he reiterated.

Ssenkumbi, however, noted that the move is temporary, saying once the Ministry of Health declares the country Ebola-free, the suspects will receive visitors normally.

The move comes two days after the Ebola virus claimed another life on Sunday, bringing the death toll in the latest outbreak of the infectious disease in the country to five.

Halima Nakimbugwe, 29, died at Bombo Hospital five days after she was admitted on Tuesday last week.

Nakimbugwe is suspected to have contracted the disease while nursing her husband, a bodaboda operator, who was the first person to die in the latest outbreak of the epidemic in Luwero district.

Two other people confirmed to have been infected with the virus have been admitted at Mulago Hospital.

Another 12 suspected to have contracted the deadly virus are also admitted at Mulago, while another six are at Bombo Hospital.  http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/637434-police-stop-visits-to-inmates-over-ebola.html

Health Intelligence also reveals that the number of people suspected to have contracted the epidemic had risen from 34 to 40.

Monday, November 19, 2012

EBOLA VIDEO UPDATE-62 MONITORED


Published on Nov 19, 2012 by 
The ministry of health has up to now failed to establish the cause of the persistent Ebola outbreaks in Uganda which is now worrying as the disease continues to claim lives.

3 die of smallpox

Saturday, December 30, 1899 - Khairpur\Faisalabad—Three children died of small pox in Therimirwah Taulka in Khairpur districtAccording to detail three children identified as Samander Dasti, Ashfaque Dasti, Farhan Dasti died at village Ajeeb Dasti near Tharimirwah and several othrers are suffering from the disease.

According to villagers a total of seven children died during the last 48 hours in different villages but health department or district administration are still unaware in this regard. People said due to poor services of health department medicine are stolen from health centers while district administration is also not paying attention in this regard.  http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=182995

Three children die of smallpox in Khairpur



KHAIRPUR - Three children died of smallpox in Therimirwah Taulka in Khairpur district. Three children identified as Samander, Ashfaq, Farhan died at village Ajeeb Dasti near Tharimirwah. 

According to the villagers, a total of seven children died during the last 48 hours in different villages, but the health department or district administration are still unaware in this regard. 

They said due to poor services of the health department, medicines are stolen from health centres while district administration is also not paying attention in this regard. 

They have demanded dispatch of doctors teams to their areas as several people including children are suffering from smallpox disease and the people are scared of the rising death toll.  http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/national/19-Nov-2012/three-children-die-of-smallpox-in-khairpur

Uganda: Health Minister Urges Calm, Ebola Stemmed


Uganda: Health Minister Urges Calm, Ebola Stemmed

BY ERIOSI NANTABA, 19 NOVEMBER 2012 — The Ministry of health in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other stake holders have mounted a quick response to contain a fresh outbreak of Ebola in Central Uganda.
The response follows confirmation of another Viral Hemorrhagic fever (Ebola) outbreak in Luwero district (75 km north of Kampala city) after two people from the same family died of Ebola.
According to the Minister of Health, Christine Ondoa, a total of three people have since the onset of the outbreak died in Luwero and have seen the ministry move fast to contain further outbreak.
"The ministry of health and its partners have to this effect moved fast and beefed up necessary measures to control the spread of this highly contagious disease including creating an isolation facility in the area and reopening the existing at Mulago National referral hospital," said Ondoa.
The first Ebola case died on October 25 and the second followed on November 10 with other five suspects closely monitored by the surveillance team.
"Those admitted have an epidemiological link with the index family and nursed the earlier two who were confirmed to have died of the disease," minister added. "Collection of samples from suspect and probable cases has already commenced as two samples from the suspected cases admitted at Mulago hospital."
WHO Disease Prevention and Control Advisor, Dr Miriam Nanyunja urged Ugandans to respect Ebola preventive measure against the disease especially isolation and social distancing.
"Capacity is boosted in terms of surveillance teams and equipment to hold the spread of the disease," Nanyunja said.
She warned that currently WHO does not recommend any travel ban to Uganda since the outbreak is highly contained.        
The last outbreak of Ebola occurred in July this year with an estimated 17 deaths in western Uganda.  http://allafrica.com/stories/201211191399.html?

Uganda: Fresh Ebola outbreak raises fears virus is nearing Kampala


Posted on Monday, 19 November 2012 15:52
Six people have died, as a fresh outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus was reported in another Ugandan district, raising fears that the disease could soon hit Kampala, the country's capital.

This is the first time the disease has been reported near Kampala, triggering panic in the city.
As if to mitigate the virus, Kampala citizens have stopped shaking each other's hand while greeting and most people now fear attending public gatherings.
The health ministry confirmed the deaths, in one week, of the six in Luwero District, 25 kilometres from Kampala.
Ironically, the latest outbreak comes barely a month after the World Health Organisation declared Uganda Ebola free.
This was after the eradication of the disease in in Kibale District about 350 kilometres from Kampala, which killed more than 20 people.
"News of an Ebola outbreak in a district near Kampala has scared many people. Few people go to bars and restaurants," Peter Baine, a local council official, said.
A medical worker, Dr Willy Isabirye said, "Now that the disease is near Kampala, we are scared that it might soon infect people in slum areas. Once it reaches the slums, it will be difficult to contain."
In response, the government has banned public gatherings in Luwero District.
A health ministry spokesperson, Rukia Nakamatte said meetings such as galas, open market, music concerts and attending burial ceremonies of those confirmed of dying from the disease were prohibited.
"People who go to places of worship should be very cautious," she advised.
She condemned villagers who still think the disease is due to witchcraft.
Nakamatte said some people, on being infected by the disease, sought treatment from traditional doctors, instead of going to hospitals.
A medical officer in Luwero said some of the deaths from the virus could have been avoided, had the infections been reported earlier.
Ebola is highly contagious disease, characterised by internal bleeding, vomiting, diarrhoea, high fever and headaches.

http://www.theafricareport.com/society-and-culture/uganda-fresh-ebola-outbreak-raises-fears-virus-is-nearing-kampala.html
Created on Monday, 19 November 2012 06:14


Three other people have already tested positive for the Ebola virus in the district. Eight other people are admitted at Mulago Referral hospital and Bombo General Military Hospital with illnesses that display Ebola virus infection. They are awaiting results of tests conducted on their blood samples. This brings to eleven the total number of persons admitted in the two hospitals. [link to www.touch.fm

Uganda: Virus Ebola arouses fear


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2012 

The Ugandan government is alert. The Minister of Health has declared a state of emergency. It "calls people to take precautions. If these safety measures are not observed, this deadly disease could be transmitted again on a large scale, "says RFI . Pig vector could be [link to www.afrik.com

Ebola in Uganda


http://www.who.int/csr/don/2012_11_17/en/index.html

 The Ministry of Health (MoH) of Uganda has notified WHO of an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Luweero district in Central Uganda.
Four cases, including 3 fatal, have been reported. Samples were taken from two cases, for which laboratory confirmation of Ebola virus (species Sudan) was made by PCR and serology tests at the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) in Entebbe.
The Ministry of Health, WHO and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have sent a team to conduct preliminary investigation into the outbreak. Health authorities are conducting active case search and tracing close contacts of the confirmed and probable cases.
The isolation facility at Mulago hospital in Kampala is reactivated and another isolation facility at Nyimbwa Health Center IV at the epicenter is being established. The military hospital in Bombo, Luweero district is also serving a holding center until the isolation facility is properly set up at the Nyimbwa Health Center IV. Seven close contacts of the cases have developed symptoms and are being isolated in the isolation facilities.
WHO and partners, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Uganda Red Cross (URCS), African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET) and Médecins-Sans-Frontières (MSF) are supporting the authorities in the response activities. Experts in the area of field epidemiology, health promotion, logistics management, and infection prevention and control are being identified to provide additional support through the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN).
With respect to this event, WHO does not recommend that any travel or trade restriction be applied to Uganda.

The Age Of The Super Virus: Why We Should Be Concerned


16/11/2012 


As of 12 November, three people - all members of the same family - were suspected to have died from the Ebola virus, a viral hemorrhagic fever, in Luwero District, 50km northwest of Kampala.
Five people who had close contact with the dec..

..The greatest worry the world has right now in medicine is the creation of the Super virus. The swine flu, Marburg and Ebola virus are deadly and the Swine flu virus spreads quickly so now imagine if you mixed both characteristics, high contagious and deadly and you have the super virus. Viruses have the ability to transform and change quickly and moving from specie to specie at will.
A cow could get a virus which is not dangerous in humans and then spread it to its herder inside of whom, if the conditions are right, it can mutate into a strain that is particularly dangerous to human beings.
The Marburg and Ebola viruses are examples of this inter species transmission from monkey to human.
Furthermore there’s the worry of drug resistance. It’s ironic because the very medicine’s that are supposed to help us will in the long run create stronger, more drug resistant strains of viruses due to their ability to evolve.

The greatest danger lies in the fact that health care sectors are woefully unprepared. Health care in Uganda..

http://www.chimpreports.com/index.php/people/health/6996-the-age-of-the-super-virus-why-we-should-be-concerned.html

Uganda must again deal with an outbreak of Ebola


Uganda must again deal with an outbreak of Ebola

THE WORLD | 

Cecafa faces Ebola scare



 http://www.bnltimes.com/index.php/daily-times/headlines/sports/12512-cecafa-faces-ebola-scare

44,000 villagers deemed to be at ebola risk


New Ebola cases confirmed in Uganda

Mon, 19 Nov 2012 11:45 GMT
Source: Member
FAMILIES are living in fear of a deadly Ebola outbreak in rural Uganda, reports children’s charity Plan International.
The highly infectious disease has claimed five lives with two more confirmed cases in Luwero, about 40 miles north of the capital Kampala.
A further 11 suspected patients, including two children, are being treated, while 40 villagers are being monitored after coming into contact with the dead or hospitalised.
The first victims were a 29-year-old, father-of-three motorcycle taxi rider, his wife and 40-year-old sister.
About 44,000 villagers are deemed to be at risk from the disease in a poor and remote farming region.
“After two days of admission with no improvement at a community health centre, the motor bicycle taxi rider was transferred to a military hospital,” says Plan’s Country Health Specialist Dr Kenneth Buyinza.
“He had high grade fever, bloody diarrhoea and was vomiting blood and sadly died two days later.
“A few days after the taxi rider’s burial, his wife and sister were also taken ill and later succumbed to the same illness. People are worried because they’re not sure who they’ve come in contact with.”
Initial efforts to contain the outbreak have been challenged by a myth it is the work of witchcraft.
One woman was admitted to the military hospital in Luwero from a traditional healer’s home, where she went for remedies.
“In a bid to trace people who had contact with the deceased taxi rider, the district task force on Ebola visited his fellow riders but all of them thought that ‘bad people’ in the community sent the disease by powers of witchcraft,” says Dr Buyinza.
“One of the myths common in the rural areas of Uganda is that loved ones fall sick because of witchcraft.
“Quite often people with such belief, lose valuable time in seeking traditional interventions in the community, only to report to the formal health facilities too late,” he adds.
Travel is restricted to the district at the centre of the outbreak, though schools and other places of public gathering such as markets are still open.
A specialist health taskforce was immediately dispatched to the area by the government to help contain the outbreak.
“The Ministry of Health has moved fast and beefed up all the necessary measures to control the spread of this highly contagious disease,” adds Dr Buyinza.
http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/new-ebola-cases-confirmed-in-uganda

quarantine of persons having been in contact with victims

quarantine of persons having been in contact with victims
Five people came into contact with these two people were placed under surveillance, two of them being placed in solitary confinement in a unit of Mulago Hospital in Kampala, according the same source. A third man died late October after showing symptoms resembling those of Ebola, but his case was not reported to authorities and no sample was taken from the corpse, she said. However, the authority in charge of the Ministry of Health does not remain without dealing with this alarming situation in his country it seeks to locate anyone having been in contact with victims. The seven doctors who took care of the one who came to Mulago and died on the spot, as well as 13 staff health for example, were quarantined she said. President Yoweri Museveni when he is speechless in the face of this new epidemic he calls his compatriots still caution. I urge you to be vigilant, avoid shaking hands, do not charge to bury someone died Ebola-like symptoms but call health workers because they know how to do , said Ugandan President. Avoid overcrowding because the disease can also be transmitted sexually , the President concluded, wishing "good luck" to his fellow . May God grant that the souls of those who died rest in eternal peace , he added.   http://journaldekin.com/article.php?aid=1572