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A young Ugandan scientist’s camera footage captured predators feeding on Marburg-carrying bats, revealing a new possible ...
Rwanda’s Ministry of Health confirmed a case of Marburg virus infection in Kigali—the first recorded instance of its kind in ...
A 25-year-old local scientist captured rare footage showing how one of the world’s deadliest viruses could jump from bats to ...
For past Marburg outbreaks in Uganda , two spillover pathways have been identified: the first, involves humans coming into contact with a fruit bat habitat (namely caves filled with bat guano).
A 25-year-old local scientist captured rare footage showing how one of the world’s deadliest viruses could jump from bats to humans.
The International Monetary Fund has approved an immediate disbursement of approximately $448.4 million (SDR 326.47 million) to Tanzania under the Extended Credit Facility and Resilience and ...
Marburg virus has the potential to be a serious public health threat, yet much more research is needed for us to understand the pathogenesis of the disease.
Health authorities confirmed that the last recorded case of the virus died on January 28, 2025. With no further infections reported, the outbreak is now considered over. This was Tanzania’s ...
While the Marburg virus does not need an intermediate host en route to infecting humans, other novel viruses could follow such a path of first passing from bat to predator where it mutates into a ...