Ebola Virus
Now that Uganda has an outbreak of the Ebola Virus ,how does the hunter deal with this ?
By not going to Uganda till it's over.
30 July 2012, 07:36
Patricio GaudianoForget uganda for now.....
30 July 2012, 08:19
LionHunterI'd much rather enter another war zone than an Ebola hot zone. Hemorrhagic Fever is no joke.
04 August 2012, 16:47
PennsyltuckyEbola patient allegedly diagnosed in Kagera
BY EMMANUEL ONYANGO
4th August 2012
As the government tries to take measures to prevent the deadly disease of Ebola from spreading into the country, one patient has been discovered to have been infected with the viruses at Nyakage hospital in Karagwe district, Kagera region.
According to one doctor from the hospital who declined to be named because he is not the authorised spokesperson, doctors at the hospital discovered a patient whose name was not immediately established with all signs of the disease when he went there for treatment on Friday.
The doctor further noted that the patient had travelled from Uganda and had entered into the country via Mulongo border in the western part of Kagera region.
08 August 2012, 01:05
Use Enough GunTanzania for those that don't know where Kagera is at.
10 August 2012, 06:08
PennsyltuckyKaterina Nikolas
Aug 7, 2012 in World
Comments
By Katerina Nikolas.
Tanzania has been placed on high alert over two suspected cases of Ebola. The two patients suffering Ebola-like symptoms had returned to Tanzania from a trip to neighboring Uganda where suspected Ebola cases have risen to 53.
The deadly Ebola outbreak in Uganda has claimed 16 lives so far according to the World Health Organization. Fear is now rising that the haemorrhagic fever that can result in an agonizing death, has spread to neighboring Tanzania.
Xinhaunet reported a spokesperson from the Tanzanian Ministry of Health and Social Welfare confirmed that a team of doctors have been sent to investigate the suspected Ebola cases. The two infected patients are a mother and her six-year-old son who have been admitted to the Nyakahanga hospital in Karagwe district, western Tanzania. They are being kept in isolation as doctors wait for blood tests to determine if they if have contracted the deadly disease.
According to Swine Flu Magazine an employee at Nyakahang hospital said the child's symptoms included profuse bleeding through his nose and ears. However, any possible Ebola-like symptoms are treated with extreme caution in communities near to a known outbreak.
Read more:
http://www.digitaljournal.com/...330249#ixzz236aNpldD