• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

Pictures of the year: Health

A look at the year's best health photos.   Slideshow 

    Avoid caves in Uganda after Marburg death: WHO

    GENEVA
    Fri Jul 11, 2008 9:44am EDT

    GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation (WHO) urged Ugandans and tourists on Friday to avoid entering caves with bats in the East African country after a Dutch woman died of Marburg hemorrhagic fever.

    Health

    The unidentified 40-year-old woman died overnight in Leiden University Medical Centre, Dutch authorities said.

    Health experts fear bats in caves and mines in western Uganda are a reservoir for the Marburg virus, a cousin of Ebola. Marburg hemorrhagic fever is a severe and highly fatal disease whose victims often bleed from multiple sites.

    People who were in close contact with the victim, who visited two caves during a three-week trip to Uganda that ended on June 28, have been monitored daily but none have shown any symptoms, WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl said.

    "It is an isolated case of imported Marburg. People should not think about amending their travel plans to Uganda but should not go into caves with bats," he said.

    In a statement, Uganda's Health Ministry advised people entering caves or mines in the western district of Kamwenge to take "maximum precaution not to get into close contact with the bats and non-human primates in the nearby forests".

    Kitaka mine in Kamwenge, about 250 km (155 miles) from the capital Kampala, was closed in August 2007 after an outbreak of the disease struck three gold miners, killing one.

    There is no vaccine or specific treatment for the contagious disease, spread through contact with blood, semen or other bodily fluids. At least 150 people died in an epidemic in Angola in 2004 and 2005, which followed an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo which cost 128 lives between 1998 and 2000, according to the WHO.

    The Dutch woman was believed to have had direct contact with a fruit bat in the cave in the Maramagambo Forest, a popular tourist attraction between Queen Elizabeth Park and Kabale, but also visited another cave at Fort Portal, the WHO said.

    "Marburg virus infection has been demonstrated by laboratory tests ...," the U.N. agency said in a statement.

    The woman suffered fever and chills four days after her return home and was admitted to Leiden hospital on July 2.

    A local tour guide was the only other person on her cave visits and Dutch authorities have alerted the tour operator, WHO said.

    "No measures were taken with respect to the passengers on the flight from Uganda as the flight occurred four days before the onset of symptoms in the patient," it said.

    (Additional reporting by Niclas Mika in Amsterdam and Daniel Wallis in Nairobi; editing by Mariam Karouny)



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    New home sales hit seven-month low

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Consumer spending rose for a second straight month in November as incomes recorded their biggest gain in six months, but a surprise drop in new home sales was a reminder that the economic recovery would be bumpy. | Video

    A glass of water taken from a residential well after the start of natural gas drilling in Dimock, Pennsylvania, March 7, 2009. Dimock is one of hundreds of sites in Pennsylvania where energy companies are now racing to tap the massive Marcellus Shale natural gas formation. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer

    Not in my watershed: NYC

    The biggest U.S. city wants the state to ban one of the most promising sources of U.S. energy -- and also one of the most contentious.  Full Article 

    Cannabis sativa plant is seen in Buenos Aires, August 21, 2009. REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian
    Bernd Debusmann:

    Obama, drugs, common sense

    American attitudes towards drug prohibition – and above all, punitive laws on marijuana – are changing too fast for policymakers and legislators to ignore.  Commentary