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DAR ES SALAAM, April 11 (Xinhuanet) -- The Tanzanian Ministry of Health has
confirmed that Marburg, a fatal disease resembling Ebola, is not a threat to
Tanzania.
Local English newspaper Daily Times quoted a ministry source assaying that
the Tanzanian government had taken necessary precautions and had been monitoring
the spread of the disease.
"Angola is too far from here," said ministry communication officer Nsachris
Mwamwaja, "We have no doubt whatsoever about the chances of the disease
occurring here. We have a strong team of experts who deal with outbreaks (of
pandemics)."
An outbreak of Marburg in Angola has claimed the lives of 184 people,
mostly children, and sickened at least 213 so far, according to a World Health
Organization report.
The deadly Marburg virus, closely related to the Ebola virus, causes severe
hemorrhagic fever. Victims bleed, often from every orifice and every organ, to
death. Few infections are as deadly.
Early symptoms of the Marburg fever include stomach pain, nausea and
vomiting. Victims then encounter fever, chills, headache, chest pain and
internal bleeding.
Marburg is caused by an animal-borne RNA virus of the filovirusfamily that
has an incubation period of between five and 21 days.
The Tanzanian Ministry of Health disseminated
information on how the disease of Ebola spreads to warn the public when the
disease broke out in neighboring Uganda in 2000. Enditem |