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WHO: Latest Ebola Cases Not Linked to Current Patients  


FILE - A health worker prepares to administer the ebola vaccine to a man in Kirembo village, Kasese district, Uganda, June 16, 2019. In an outbreak that began in September 2022 in the country, there have been 60 confirmed cases and 44 deaths, the World Health Organization said.
FILE - A health worker prepares to administer the ebola vaccine to a man in Kirembo village, Kasese district, Uganda, June 16, 2019. In an outbreak that began in September 2022 in the country, there have been 60 confirmed cases and 44 deaths, the World Health Organization said.

The eight most recent Ebola cases reported during the outbreak in Uganda have no known links with current patients, the World Health Organization said Wednesday, raising concerns about the spread of the deadly disease.

In a briefing, WHO said initial investigations into the cases by Uganda's Ministry of Health had found they were not contacts of people already known to have Ebola.

"We remain concerned that there may be more chains of transmission and more contacts than we know about in the affected communities," WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

There have been 60 confirmed and 20 probable cases since the outbreak began last month, and 44 deaths, the WHO said.

The strain spreading in Uganda is the Sudan strain, and the existing vaccines and therapies do not work against it.

However, the Ugandan government is collaborating with WHO to set up a trial of two vaccines in the early stages of development that target the Sudan strain — one developed by Oxford University and the Serum Institute, and one made by the Sabin Institute in the United States, WHO confirmed.

The U.S. has also sent experimental therapies to help tackle the outbreak.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said on Saturday that the government was implementing some lockdown measures, including restricting movement and closing places of worship and entertainment, in Mubende and Kassanda districts in central Uganda, the epicenter of the epidemic.

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