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Dr Veena Aggarwal, Consultant Womens’ Health, CMD and Editor-in-Chief, IJCP Group & Medtalks Trustee, Dr KK’s Heart Care Foundation of India 16 February 2023
Equatorial Guinea, a country in Central Africa, confirmed its first Marburg Virus Disease outbreak on Tuesday, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). One patient has tested positive for the disease, while 16 are suspected to have the infection. There have been nine deaths so far. The source of the outbreak is yet to be identified.
Marburg virus disease is one among the various diseases in the WHO’s list of priority pathogens. Others include Covid-19, Crimean-Cong hemorrhagic fever, Ebola virus disease, Lassa fever, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), Nipah and henipaviral diseases, Rift Valley fever, Zika and Disease X. The list is expected to be updated this year.1
Marburg virus disease, earlier known as Marburg hemorrhagic fever, is a rare but highly infectious and potentially fatal disease in humans. It first came to light in 1967 when two outbreaks of severe febrile illness associated with hemorrhage and shock occurred at the same time in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany and in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The disease is endemic in Africa and outbreaks have been reported in African countries like Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, South Africa, Uganda and Ghana.2
At present, Marburg virus disease is categorized as a Risk Group 4 pathogen by the WHO indicative of high individual and community risk and which requires Biosafety Level 4 containment.3
Here are some key facts about the disease.2
In this age of globalization, geographical boundaries have disappeared. This allows highly infectious pathogens to travel around the world, outside the endemic regions, to areas where they were previously not known to occur. Though the Covid pandemic put the breaks on global travel for some time, countries have reopened their borders.
Hence, robust surveillance systems should be in place and monitoring should be continuous to preempt any outbreaks. The general public must be educated about these diseases so that they can take adequate precautions.
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