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Outbreak of Deadly Ebola Like Fever Spreads From Uganda to Sudan

Hassan_Ishtiaq

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HEALTH bosses have confirmed they are facing an outbreak of the “eye-bleeding fever” after four people died of the suspected disease in weeks.

By Henry Holloway / Published 15th January 2018

Uganda’s health ministry has today finally admitted it is facing the risk of a large-scale explosion of the viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF).

VHF causes victims to suffer a burning fever before beginning to bleed from orifices including their eyes, anuses and mouths.

It comes after a girl, nine, was reportedly killed by the infection Uganda, and three people died in neighbouring South Sudan of similar symptoms.

Uganda health minster Sarah Opendi confirmed emergency response teams are now being deployed to the districts of Nakaseke and Luweero.

She also identified the mystery disease, saying tests have revealed the infection is Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF).

Today, health minister Opendi said: "Results from Uganda Virus Research Institute tested positive for the Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever and negative for other viral Hemorrhagic Fevers like Ebola, Marburg, Rift Valley Fever and Sosua.”

The confirmation comes after just two weeks ago the Ugandan Health Ministry denied there was an outbreak.

Positive tests for CCHF came from samples taken from a 9-year-old paitent in Kihwoko Hospital.

Experts from the World Health Organisation (WHO) have already said they were monitoring for an outbreak after reports in South Sudan.

CCHF is spread to humans via mosquito and tick bites, or contact with raw meat and infected animal blood immediately after slaughter.

"CCHF outbreaks constitute a threat to public health services because of its epidemic potential, its high case fatality ratio (10-40%), its potential for nosocomial outbreaks and the difficulties in treatment and prevention,” WHO’s description of the virus reads.

WHO first raised fears of a VHF outbreak in central Africa with a report of a number of deaths in South Sudan.

A pregnant woman, and two teenagers all succumbed to a mystery infection along with a number of animals.

However, it is not confirmed whether these deaths are also from CCHF or a separate similar strain of VHF.

Outbreak in the nation could be catastrophic – with South Sudan bordered by Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, the Congo and the Central African Republic.

There were fears up to 60 people could be infected, and are each undergoing analysis by a team from the Sudanese health ministry and WHO.

In a recent report, WHO wrote: "The outbreak of suspected viral haemorrhagic fever in South Sudan could rapidly evolve, and critical information including laboratory confirmation of the etiology of disease is needed to direct response efforts.

"Strengthened surveillance in affected human and animal populations is needed to facilitate rapid detection of human and animal cases and response.

“Strengthened capacity to clinically manage any new cases is also needed in the affected area.”

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Hopefully they will get this outbreak under control ASAP so it does not spread further.

However I have to state the following; South Sudan has really been a HUGE success story since their independence in 2011. One good story after the other. Irony might have been used here.

Wonder who they will blame their many failures on now that the "evil Arab North Sudan" (ironic since almost every Northern Sudanese has Black/African ancestry as well as Arab due to intermarriages since time immortal) is no longer ruling them. Even Sudan under a pathetic dictatorship is doing 100 times better and there is some progress to spot.

In any case hopefully there will be few casualties in both Uganda and South Sudan. Ebola is no joke.

I have the utmost respect for volunteers going there like they did in Sierra Leone and Liberia (I think it was). Guinea too if I recall.
 
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Hopefully they will get this outbreak under control ASAP so it does not spread further.
Indeed. The potential for this type of disease spreading is alarmingly fast.

However I have to state the following; South Sudan has really been a HUGE success story since their independence in 2011. One good story after the other. Irony might have been used here..
Sorry but I'm terrible at catching irony or sarcasm.
Wonder who they will blame their many failures on now that the "evil Arab North Sudan" (ironic since almost every Northern Sudanese has Black/African ancestry as well as Arab) is no longer ruling them. Even Sudan under a pathetic dictatorship is doing 100 times better and there is some progress to spot.
I hope things go well for them. They are a fairly young country.
In any case hopefully there will be few casualties in both Uganda and South Sudan.
What makes you say that?
 
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Indeed. The potential for this type of disease spreading is alarmingly fast.


Sorry but I'm terrible at catching irony or sarcasm.

I hope things go well for them. They are a fairly young country.

What makes you say that?

Extremely quickly if there are challenges in regards to sanitation and suffice to say this is quite common in those two countries. That's how the disease spreads.

That's why I made it clear in case people thought that I was not ironic which I tend to be from time to time.:lol:

Well, so do I. The more stable Sub-Saharan Africa is the bigger is the potential for trade with them and cooperation on all fronts. A win-win situation for everyone involved. Personally I would also visit this part of the world due to its natural beauty so the more peaceful and stable it is the bigger is the likeliness of me visiting.

Well, it's just a hope of mine that as few people as possible die. Nothing concrete to base this on as I learned the news from you about this Ebola outbreak.
 
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why most of the Deadly Diseases pop up in Africa ? it is such a nature rich continent
 
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Extremely quickly if there are challenges in regards to sanitation and suffice to say this is quite common in those two countries. That's how the disease spreads.

That's why I made it clear in case people thought that I was not ironic which I tend to be from time to time.:lol:

Well, so do I. The more stable Sub-Saharan Africa is the bigger is the potential for trade with them and cooperation on all fronts. A win-win situation for everyone involved.

Well, it's just a hope of mine that as few people as possible die. Nothing concrete to base this on as I learned the news from you about this Ebola outbreak.
Yes certainly. The potential for Saudi Arabia's influence through trade in this region is there. I have always wondered why Arab countries never took advantage of the close proximity of the Arab world to sub-saharan Africa to increase their clout in that region. The Chinese who are thousands of kilometers away are certainly doing this.

Well, it's just a hope of mine that as few people as possible die. Nothing concrete to base this on as I learned the news from you about this Ebola outbreak.
Indeed. I just saw the news on my feed.

Extremely quickly if there are challenges in regards to sanitation and suffice to say this is quite common in those two countries. That's how the disease spreads.

That's why I made it clear in case people thought that I was not ironic which I tend to be from time to time.:lol:

Well, so do I. The more stable Sub-Saharan Africa is the bigger is the potential for trade with them and cooperation on all fronts. A win-win situation for everyone involved.

Well, it's just a hope of mine that as few people as possible die. Nothing concrete to base this on as I learned the news from you about this Ebola outbreak.
Yes certainly. The potential for Saudi Arabia's influence through trade in this region is there. I have always wondered why Arab countries never took advantage of the close proximity of the Arab world to sub-saharan Africa to increase their clout in that region. The Chinese who are thousands of kilometers away are certainly doing this.

Well, it's just a hope of mine that as few people as possible die. Nothing concrete to base this on as I learned the news from you about this Ebola outbreak.
Indeed. I just saw the news on my feed.
 
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why most of the Deadly Diseases pop up in Africa ? it is such a nature rich continent

Due to biological diversity and challenges when it comes to sanitation. Lack of awareness as well. Ebola apparently originated in wild bats. Since some African people or tribes eat monkeys killed in the wild, a disease like this can spread.

 
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Yes certainly. The potential for Saudi Arabia's influence through trade in this region is there. I have always wondered why Arab countries never took advantage of the close proximity of the Arab world to sub-saharan Africa to increase their clout in that region. The Chinese who are thousands of kilometers away are certainly doing this.


Indeed. I just saw the news on my feed.


Yes certainly. The potential for Saudi Arabia's influence through trade in this region is there. I have always wondered why Arab countries never took advantage of the close proximity of the Arab world to sub-saharan Africa to increase their clout in that region. The Chinese who are thousands of kilometers away are certainly doing this.


Indeed. I just saw the news on my feed.

The proximity is mostly to Horn of Africa and there is close cooperation (relative) with the African countries of that part of the region. As for Sub-Saharan African countries the Maghreb and Egypt should take the lead here due to only the Sahel separating them and being a part of the African continent and thus all pan-African organizations whether political or economic.

KSA has been doing that lately with Al-Jubeir (foreign minister) visiting a few Sub-Saharan African countries (Muslim-majority as well as Christian-majority) looking for investments and cooperation.

Personally I am in favor of this and have called for closer economic ties for quite some time. There is a significant Arab minority in those countries and regions (Horn of Africa and Eastern Africa = Swahili coastline and Sahel) and a religious connection (Islam) as well as a ancient trade connection that already existed during Pharaonic times.

Arabs would no doubt have the advantage over pretty much everyone else. The Chinese, as you correctly wrote, already saw the potential so they acted. However you can't compare China (due to size, population (1.3 billion!), economic size) with even the Arab world that is 2.2 times smaller when it comes to population and significantly smaller economically wise). Not to say that the Arab world (parts of it) have been unstable since the "Arab Spring" and thus focus has been on other pursuits. KSA is also engaged in a proxy war with the Mullah's currently. If none of this was the case I am sure that more focus could be given on such a field.

It will come however with time.
 
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The proximity is mostly to Horn of Africa and there is close cooperation (relative) with the African countries of that part of the region. As for Sub-Saharan African countries the Maghreb and Egypt should take the lead here due to only the Sahel separating them and being a part of the African continent and thus all pan-African organizations whether political or economic.

KSA has been doing that lately with Al-Jubeir (foreign minister) visiting a few Sub-Saharan African countries (Muslim-majority as well as Christian-majority) looking for investments and cooperation.

Personally I am in favor of this and have called for closer economic ties. There is a significant Arab minority in those countries (Horn of Africa and Eastern Africa = Swahili coastline and Sahel) and a religious connection (Islam) as well as a ancient trade connection that already existed during Pharaonic times.

Arabs would no doubt have the advantage over pretty much everyone else. The Chinese, as you correctly wrote, already saw the potential so they acted. However you can't compare China (due to size, population (1.3 billion!), economic size) with even the Arab world that is 2.2 times smaller when it comes to population and significantly smaller economically wise). Not to say that the Arab world (parts of it) have been unstable since the "Arab Spring" and thus focus has been on other pursuits. KSA is also engaged in a proxy war with the Mullah's currently. If none of this was the case I am sure that more focus could be given on such a field.

It will come however with time.
Thanks for this detailed explanation. I certainly think the Arab "spring" destabilized the region considerably. Though it is great to see that KSA is still standing, the true bastion of Arab power.
 
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Hope the vaccine last time they claimed they built ,show some effectiveness outside lab.

And be reasonable pried so I can be used fortese countries .
 
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Remembering Ebola: two years on

Two years after the end of the West African Ebola epidemic, are we prepared for another outbreak?

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Locals celebrating in the streets of Liberia after the country was declared free of EbolaEPA/Ahmed Jallanzo
by Shoomena Anil

Saturday December 23 2017, 12:02pm

Nearly two years ago, the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the end of the 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa. By then, the virus had infected 50 times more people than any previous Ebola outbreak.

Apocalypse averted, in other words.

Nonetheless, more than 11,000 people were killed before arguably outdated methods, such as isolating cases and quarantining the contacts of those diagnosed, put an end to the outbreak. Overall, inadequate health facilities, sub-standard infection control and a slow international response contributed to the most widespread outbreak of Ebola in history. The fact that in 2017 the word barely passes our lips begs the question: where do we currently stand in the war against of Ebola?

“What is the likelihood of a future Ebola outbreak? High, actually”

In the wake of the 2014 epidemic, a pharmaceutical marathon has ensued. Scientists in Russia and China have already licensed vaccines. Most recently, a vaccine touted as 100% effective, rVSV-ZEBOV, has been placed under review for use by the FDA in the USA. The genetic ‘spine’ of this vaccine is that of the vesicular stomatitis virus, which infects cattle but not humans. Spliced into the spine is the gene coding for the membrane protein of the Zaire strain of the Ebola virus that prompts the immune system to make antibodies against the pathogen, without the virus taking hold. It is suggested that in the event of another Ebola outbreak, the world might be able to turn to an emergency supply of this vaccine, currently available in a bank of 300,000 doses.

Yet, what is the likelihood of a future Ebola outbreak? High, actually. The virus is under evolutionary pressure to infect humans more readily. The A82V mutation, which alters the protein used by the virus to enter host cells, arose early in the 2014 epidemic and coincided with its acceleration. This makes sense, since studies show that the A82V mutation allows the Ebola virus to infect humans up to four times more efficiently than the ‘original’ strain.

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The Ebola virus particle. The disease will likely continue to mutate, with potentially catastrophic consequencesCenter for Disease Control, USA
A further exacerbating factor is urbanisation, which also contributed to the unleashing of HIV. According to the African Development Bank, the continent has had the world’s highest urban growth rate for 20 years, and the proportion of Africans living in cities will rise from 36% today to 60% by 2050. When it comes to infectious diseases, living in such close quarters can lead to disaster.

“Evidently, this is not only West Africa’s problem”

Alongside advances in vaccination, there are other ways in which we can prepare for a further Ebola outbreak. Pivotally, West Africa must strengthen its health infrastructure, in particular, with respect to hospital infection control and educating the public. Furthermore, surveillance could prove key to limiting future outbreaks. The 2014 Ebola crisis mobilised unprecedented financial assistance for West Africa: $400 million from the World Bank was directed towards an ambitious blueprint that revolves around the concept of public health surveillance. Each country in West Africa is to share surveillance data systematically, with a regional hub via a national coordinating institute. While this is planned to be fully staffed by early 2018, at the last report just 9 of the 15 countries had designated their national coordinating institute. It is crucial that a move is taken from words into action, so that future cases may be able to be detected and dealt with more quickly, and tragedy averted.

Evidently, this is not only West Africa’s problem. As an international community, we need to unite behind the broader aims of improving living conditions and sanitation, stabilising healthcare facilities, and promoting education if we are to curb future epidemics.

https://www.varsity.co.uk/science/14321

China approves domestic Ebola vaccine developed from recent outbreak
by Angus Liu |
Oct 24, 2017 4:04pm
Cansino.jpg

China has approved a domestically developed Ebola vaccine based on a different virus type from GSK's and Merck's shots. (CanSino)

As promising Ebola vaccines from global drugmakers GlaxoSmithKline and Merck & Co. still await official licenses, China has approved its own shot, co-developed by the Chinese Academy of Military Medical Sciences’ Bioengineering Institute and domestic vaccine specialist Tianjin CanSino Biologics.


Dubbed Ad5-EBOV, the recombinant adenovirus vector-based vaccine is the first shot based on the strain behind the recent epidemic in West Africa in 2014—the deadliest outbreak in recorded history. Along with the CFDA decision, the Chinese vaccinemaker revealed (Chinese) a 65,000-square-meter (700,000-square-foot), 70-million-dose-capacity manufacturing site, which the company said is in compliance with the World Health Organization’s cGMP requirement.

The vaccine differs from programs at GSK and Merck because those companies' vaccines are developed to express the glycoprotein of the Ebola virus identified during the disease’s discovery back in 1976. CanSino says the two virus types are very similar, but slight differences could allow its shot to provide better protection in the real world.

RELATED: Ebola vaccines from GlaxoSmithKline, Merck elicit yearlong response, study finds

Because the Ebola crisis has died down, China’s FDA approved Ad5-EBOV without a phase 3 test after putting the product on its expedited review list in April. CanSino told FiercePharma that the vaccine has also been through a challenge experiment at the microbiology lab at the Public Health Agency of Canada, the original developer of Merck's rVSV-ZEBOV.

In a 500-participant phase 2 trial in Sierra Leone, the results of which were published earlier this year in The Lancet, the vaccine elicited strong antibody responses in volunteers within 28 days. Researchers noted that the responses, though still existent, decreased significantly at day 168, a finding the team said is consistent with previous tests on rVSV-ZEBOV in Africa and Europe.


In a related commentary published alongside the Ad5-EBOV study results, two experts from the Netherlands expressed concerns about the “durability of protection when implementing mass vaccination campaigns in future outbreak settings in Africa.” CanSino, in a written response to FiercePharma, said the product is positioned for emergency use for now; therefore, it's currently focused on long-term efficacy. The company didn't rule out the possibility for implementing a booster shot in the future.

RELATED: Sinovac to go private as bribery concerns hint at investor class-action lawsuits

A recent phase 2 study conducted by a U.S.-Liberia partnership showed that responses to Merck’s and GSK’s shots also peaked after a month, and that most recipients of the two shots still had an antibody response at one year.

CanSino's program further incorporates a freeze-drying technique known as lyophilization, which allows the vaccine to be stored at 4°C (39°F) for a long time, and to remain stable at 37°C (99°F) for about three weeks. The other two candidates, on the other hand, must be stored at -70°C (-94°F) or below, and are stable for only one week at 4°C (39°F). This means CanSino's version could be more suitable for the African region in terms of logistics.

https://www.fiercepharma.com/vaccin...d-ebola-vaccine-from-2014-outbreak-virus-type
 
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Seems stupid, was there a bribe or something? And why specifically Uganda in that region lol. Why not all the East African ones all together (Kenya, Tanzania etc)?.....#nologic
My guess most likely some kind of bribe or money making involved. Desi politicians don't lift a finger unless they're getting their pockets stuffed in the process.

Personally Im against the concept of dual nationality. It's mostly for cosmopolitans and subversives take advantage of this kind of status. And that's besides a host of other problem. I don't want Africans coming into Pakistan. The ones that are here in Pakistan, many of them refugees, are usually involved in drug related activities and many of them don't leave. But of course our wannabe Liberals and cosmopolitan elites don't have to deal with this problem since they are mostly confined to their elite quarters.
 
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