Lara Adejoro The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said the Republic of Rwanda had recorded 27 confirmed cases of Marburg Virus Disease and nine deaths as of September 30, 2024. The Africa CDC made this known in a press statement on Tuesday. The Ministry of Health of the Republic of Rwanda declared a Marburg virus disease outbreak on September 27, 2024.
The centre said, “As of September 30, 27 confirmed cases and nine deaths have been reported; most of the cases are health care workers. Over 297 contacts have been registered and are under follow-up. “The Ministry of Health is working tirelessly in collaboration with relevant partners to contain the deadly virus through enhanced preventive measures in all health facilities.
Contact tracing is underway, and cases have been isolated for treatment. The Ministry of Health further urged Rwandans to remain vigilant and strengthen preventive measures by ensuring hygiene, washing hands with soap, sanitizing hands, and taking necessary precautionary measures when in contact with other individuals.” MVD is a severe and often fatal zoonotic haemorrhagic illness caused by the Marburg virus.
The virus is usually transmitted to humans from fruit bats. Human-to-human transmission occurs through direct contact with an infected person’s body fluids, or with equipment and materials contaminated with infectious blood or tissues. “There is currently no vaccine or specific treatment for MVD, so supportive therapy should b.