Summary
· A total of 212 people who were suspected to have contacts with the patients were so far traced and 35 of them have already been released
Dar es Salaam. One patient among those diagnosed with Marburg virus in
Kagera region was discharged yesterday, making him the first recovered case
from the killer disease that was reported last month.
On March 21, Tanzania confirmed the
first-ever outbreak of the Marburg virus disease as the Minister for Health,
Ummy Mwalimu, announced that five people had died while three others were
receiving treatment in hospital.
In a positive move yesterday,
however, Ms Mwalimu announced that a 26-year-old male patient was discharged
from the hospital while the number of cases had not increased since the
outbreak was reported.
“I’m happy to announce that we have discharged
one patient from the hospital, and he is healthy,” she said in a statement.
“It’s my hope that the community
will accept him and cooperate with him in their daily activities,” she added.
Two patients were still receiving
treatment in hospital.
According to Ms Mwalimu’s statement,
a total of 212 people who were suspected to have had contacts with the patients
were traced, and 35 of them have already been released from isolation after
completing the 21 required days.
“This is a good sign that the
Marburg virus disease has been put under control,” said Ms Mwalimu, adding that
people should continue with their activities as long as they take precautions
until the government and other international agencies are convinced that the
virus is completely over.
The government had deployed a rapid
response team to Kagera, which borders Uganda, to probe the illness.
The Marburg virus is highly
dangerous and contagious. It causes a severe fever, often accompanied by
bleeding and organ failure.
It is part of the so-called
filovirus family, which also includes Ebola, which has wreaked havoc in several
previous outbreaks in Africa, including in Uganda.
The UN’s World Health Organization
(WHO) applauded Tanzania’s rapid reaction to the outbreak, adding that it stood
ready to ensure “there are no gaps in response.”
“WHO is supporting the Ministry of
Health to deploy an emergency team to Kagera to carry out further
epidemiological investigations. The emergency team will focus on active case
finding in the community and local health care facilities to identify more
contacts and provide them with appropriate care,” the UN agency stated.
Neighbouring Uganda, which witnessed
its last outbreak in 2017, said it was on “high alert.”
Human-wild animal interactions
The suspected natural source of the
Marburg virus is the African fruit bat, which carries the pathogen but does not
fall sick from it.
The virus takes its name from the
German city of Marburg, where it was first identified in 1967 in a lab where
workers had been in contact with infected green monkeys imported from Uganda.
The animals can pass the virus to
other primates in close proximity, including humans, and human-to-human
transmission then occurs through contact with blood or other body fluids.
Fatality rates in confirmed cases
have ranged from 24 percent to 88 percent in previous outbreaks, depending on
the virus strain and case management, according to WHO.
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