Skip to main content

 

.

 

 

.

SomaliNet Library

Uganda: Ebola kills two doctors western Uganda

Published on: 2007-12-05 23:07:32

(SomaliNet) In what brings the death toll to 21 of the 91 people infected by Ebola in Uganda since the strain first appeared in September, the deadly virus has killed two doctors in western Uganda, an official said on Wednesday.

\"The sad news is that our doctor who was admitted in Mulago died last night and a senior clinic officer who had been in critical condition died this morning,\" said Samuel Kazinga, district commissioner for Bundibugyo, the epicentre of the new outbreak.

According to some health officials, lack of appropriate equipment in Mulago, the largest public hospital in Uganda, and other hospitals has allowed the virus to spread.

Ugandan health ministry announced in a statement that Ebola has infected 91 people so far.

The statement said, of those still alive, 36 remain in health centres in Bundibugyo and Kyikyo area.

The health ministry confirmed the latest fatalities caused by the virulent local strain of Ebola, which kills up to 90 percent of its victims, mostly by puncturing blood vessels and triggering non-stop haemorrhage.

Eight pathogen experts from the Atlanta-based Centres for Disease Control (CDC) arrived in the country on Tuesday to help battle the mysterious strain with scant history.

Efforts to isolate suspected patients in the rural district neighbouring the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have failed as many residents fear hospitals are unsafe, authorities have said.

Effectively, this has scuppered efforts to compile exact figures, officials said.

The rare disease, named after a small DRC river, killed at least 170 people in northern Uganda in 2000, with experts blaming poor sanitation and hygiene.

It was first discovered in the DRC in 1976, but other outbreaks have been recorded in Ivory Coast and Gabon.

At the same time the government had deployed health officials to the country\'s north-western and northern region to deal with fears of extremely contagious cholera, plague, meningitis and hepatitis outbreaks. - Sapa-AFP

Back to Category