Tanzania's president said a sample tested positive for the Marburg virus, which has a fatality rate of up to 88 percent if untreated.
Related Mystery illness sickens hundreds, kills dozens in Congo Lingering infection may be causing Long COVID CDC to test travelers from Rwanda for Marburg virus The World Health Organization ...
WORLD Health Organisation (WHO) has donated essential medical equipment worth $30,000 (78m/-) to help combat the Marburg ...
Marburg virus disease is like its close cousin ... outbreak like this occurs is to stop it at its source. When the World Health Organization heard about the suspected outbreak, one of their ...
It has tried to impose a "radical abortion regime" on countries, and has backed gender-affirming care "as a medical right." Withdrawing from WHO is a shame because it "provides valuable public health ...
In the face of the ongoing Marburg Virus disease (MVD) outbreak in Kagera, Tanzania, frontline health workers and local communities have received vital support from the World Health Organization ...
“The World Health Organization should be ashamed of themselves ... The WHO and its member nations are currently battling an outbreak of Marburg virus, a deadly cousin of Ebola, in Tanzania ...
The World Health Organization called on the US to ... polio and Ebola as well as a recent outbreak of lethal Marburg virus could be at risk.
A human sample in Tanzania has tested positive for deadly Marburg virus, confirming the disease is present in the African country. Last week, the World Health Organization said it suspected the ...
President Samia Suluhu Hassan spoke in Dodoma, the capital, alongside World Health Organization Director ... Like Ebola, the Marburg virus originates in fruit bats and spreads between people ...
One of President Trump’s first executive orders removes the U.S. from the global health organization, which experts say is “cataclysmic.” ...