Marburg virus disease has killed 11 people and sickened 25 others in Rwanda, which declared an outbreak on Sept. 27.
There are no treatments or vaccines approved for Marburg, a virus in the same family as Ebola with a fatality rate between 24 ...
The East African country continues to investigate the source of the outbreak, first traced among patients in health ...
Health officials in Rwanda are dealing with the country’s first outbreak of the Marburg virus, an Ebola-like disease which, ...
He said the source of the disease has not been determined yet. Like Ebola, the Marburg virus originates in fruit bats. It can spread between people through close contact with the bodily fluids of ...
A similar vaccine, being developed at the University of Oxford, UK, was also named as a priority for testing during a Marburg ...
(NEXSTAR) – Health officials in Rwanda are dealing with the country’s first outbreak of the Marburg virus, an Ebola-like disease which, if left untreated, has a fatality rate of up to 88%.
Rwanda’s first recorded infections of the Marburg virus, an Ebola-like hemorrhagic fever, is another sign that outbreaks of dangerous animal-borne diseases will become more frequent in an ...