Uganda's Ebola caseload rises to 12: WHO

A Ugandan doctor vaccinates the contact of a patient who tested positive during the launch of the vaccination for the Sudan strain of the Ebola virus with a trial vaccine at the Mulago Guest House (Isolation centre) in Kampala, Uganda, on February 3 2025. File photo.
A Ugandan doctor vaccinates the contact of a patient who tested positive during the launch of the vaccination for the Sudan strain of the Ebola virus with a trial vaccine at the Mulago Guest House (Isolation centre) in Kampala, Uganda, on February 3 2025. File photo.
Image: REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa

Uganda's Ebola virus caseload has risen to 12, up from 10, with two people who died early last month being considered probable cases, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Wednesday.

On Saturday WHO reported the death of the latest victim of the outbreak, a four-year-old boy who died last week at the country's national referral hospital, Mulago.

The WHO listed the mother of that boy and her other child as probable Ebola cases in its latest weekly bulletin on disease outbreaks.

The mother died on February 6, a few days after giving birth "following an acute illness," the WHO said, adding that the newborn died on February 12.

"No laboratory tests were conducted following their deaths, and they were respectively buried," the WHO said.

The four-year-old boy who died on Saturday was taken to four health facilities before his death, and was not a known contact of the outbreak's first case, WHO said.

Uganda declared the outbreak of the Sudan strain of the highly infectious and often fatal haemorrhagic disease in January.

Ebola symptoms include fever, headache and muscle pains. The virus is transmitted through contact with infected bodily fluids and tissue.

The UN has launched an emergency appeal to raise $11.2m (R205.4m) to help fund the country's response to the outbreak after the country's health budget was strained by US cuts to foreign aid.

Uganda has launched a trial vaccination programme against the Sudan strain of Ebola. Existing vaccines are for the Zaire strain of Ebola, which was behind recent outbreaks in neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo.


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