The World Health Organisation (WHO) said it was conducting further investigations alongside local health authorities after confirming the number of cases has jumped from 419 to 1096 and the number of deaths has risen from 53 to 60...
Symptoms have included fever, headache, chills, sweating, stiff neck, muscle aches, joint pain and body aches, nose bleeds or a runny nose, cough, vomiting and diarrhoea. Deaths occurring within two days of symptom onset...
Dr Zania Stamataki, Associate Professor in Viral Immunology, University of Birmingham, said the UK should “remain vigilant” as viral infections can remain dormant for days before people start showing symptoms, meaning people could travel and mix with others while they weren’t feeling to sick, spurring transmission...
The WHO previously said the outbreak began in the town of Boloko after three children ate a bat and died within 48 hours following hemorrhagic fever symptoms.
While it remained unclear whether the outbreak was caused by a bat-related virus, Dr Stamataki said bats carried many viruses that could be severe in humans.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/h...-b2705717.html
(the date on this is really strange, on google search, it says one hour ago, on the webpage itself, says 1970?)
Symptoms have included fever, headache, chills, sweating, stiff neck, muscle aches, joint pain and body aches, nose bleeds or a runny nose, cough, vomiting and diarrhoea. Deaths occurring within two days of symptom onset...
Dr Zania Stamataki, Associate Professor in Viral Immunology, University of Birmingham, said the UK should “remain vigilant” as viral infections can remain dormant for days before people start showing symptoms, meaning people could travel and mix with others while they weren’t feeling to sick, spurring transmission...
The WHO previously said the outbreak began in the town of Boloko after three children ate a bat and died within 48 hours following hemorrhagic fever symptoms.
While it remained unclear whether the outbreak was caused by a bat-related virus, Dr Stamataki said bats carried many viruses that could be severe in humans.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/h...-b2705717.html
(the date on this is really strange, on google search, it says one hour ago, on the webpage itself, says 1970?)
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