Friday, 29 May 2026

COVID-19, Bundibugyo Ebolavirus (Ebola), H5N1 (Avian Flu) and Other Virus and Health UK and World News Update 29th May 2026

COVID-19, Bundibugyo Ebolavirus (Ebola), H5N1 (Avian Flu) and Other Virus and Health UK and World News Update 29th May 2026

Ebola later... everything else first... 

Some good news. COVID levels are really low. So low in fact that Scottish COVID levels are at their lowest since 2020 - and that includes wastewater, so it isn't even a result of no-one testing. 
I dunno, I usually end on a high, but I start with a COVID update. I'll remind you again at the end. 

DRC Health Ministry Ebola prevention image of a woman and child washing hands


Resident doctors in England will hold their 16th walkout over pay and conditions from 7am on Monday 15th June to 7am Friday 19th June. The BMA says there'll be “more strike dates in July” if no further progress is made.
Seems they get on with the UK's new Health Secretary James Murray as well as they got on with Wes Streeting... 

The UK Government have announced an extra £340 million for pharmacies. From Autumn, "under the new contractual framework, pharmacists who hold an independent prescribing qualification will be able to assess patients and prescribe medicines directly, building on the success of the Pharmacy First service".
This is for a list of conditions such as shingles and sinusitis, and does expand on an existing service. 
The Government say it'll make treatment quicker and closer to home, relieve pressure on GP's and hospitals, and use a Pharmacist's skills. Pharmacy groups say it doesn't go far enough as there is a well-known £2.5 BILLION funding gap, it just moves pressure somewhere else and it won't prevent more pharmacies closing down. 

WHO safe practice near water drowning prevention starts with you

The Hantavirus situation remains "stable". The isolations and quarantines are working.
3 more people are confirmed infected, bringing the total to 13 (11 confirmed, 2 probable). Thankfully no-one else has died.
Patient 11 is an MV Hondius passenger who returned to isolation in hospital in British Columbia, Canada, and tested positive on May 16.
Patient 12 is a crew member who stayed aboard the MV Hondius cruise ship, and was repatriated to The Netherlands where they've been in isolation.
Patient 13 is a second person in quarantine in Spain, who tested positive on Monday 25th May, bringing the total of Spanish positives to 4. Now... on 22nd May we were told they were all doing well and were able to come out of their rooms and spend time in communal areas, soooo... are they going to reset their quarantine period? 
The 18 US citizens who are in biocontainment facilities in Nebraska and Georgia all test negative, including the 2 who had symptoms and were taken initially to Atlanta. Two of those quarantined asked to go home. In return they have received mandatory quarantine orders and have to stay until 31st May. This will be 21 days after arrival, and covers the period in which most people with Hantavirus generally develop symptoms.
You'd think "well, that's sensible, it means they'll definitely quarantine properly". However, in one case her career and master's degree were in emergency management. “I worked in health and safety and emergency planning for remote locations..." She knows more about how to quarantine safely than most, and is very clear she doesn't want to risk anyone else - she just wants to go home. 

Dr Tedros this is the 17th Eloba outbreak image of previous message saying we can beat this one too

For the first time a Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) has been found in a European Arctic polar bear. It wasn't the H5N1 which is the main bird flu affecting mammals globally, the bear and a nearby walrus in Svalbard both tested positive for H5N5 avian flu. Both animals were already deceased. Tests are underway to see if the H5N5 had mutated to make it more transmissible to mammals.
Deceased polar bears in Alaska have previously tested positive for HPAI H5N1, potentially after eating dead birds. 
The shrinking of polar bear habitat and traditional food sources due to climate change may be playing a part... 

H5N1 Avian Flu has slowed in the Northern hemisphere as we approach Summer, but not gone away. Asia is reporting quite a few new infections, as they go into Winter. 
The USDA have logged 2 more Idaho cattle herds infected since the last report (14 in the last 30 days, all Idaho), and in the last 30 days 18 newly infected bird flocks (12 commercial, 6 backyard).
The UK has reported no newly infected flocks in the last few weeks. The season total stands at 100 (England 79, Scotland 9, Wales 7, Northern Ireland 5).

A cat owner from Oregon, USA, has sued the company who manufactured raw cat food tainted with H5N1 that killed his cat, and he has won a massive $808,000. 
Wild Coast Pet Foods assured owners they were testing for H5N1 bird flu and they were not. They lied. 
3 US manufacturers have had to recall raw cat food found to contain H5N1. At least 135 pet cats have tested positive for H5N1 across 22 states - most will have caught it from eating wild birds or even small rodents, but there are a substantial number of unhappy people out there who fed raw store-bought food - including owners of house cats with no access to wild birds or animals. It's not clear how many of the cats died, but we know cats don't do well with bird flu, and vet bills are not cheap. I don’t think this'll be the last case to go to court. 

Researchers from the US University of Michigan Engineering and the UK's University of Bristol are collaborating on research to study bird flu in the air. They want to asses the dangers to agricultural workers and animals, and how they can reduce those risks. They will be working with exciting things such as "nonthermal plasma", which has been shown to deactivate airborne virus particles, but doesn’t work so well if there's ammonia in the air - such as happens when large animals wee. 
This research, funded by a $2m grant from USDA (US Department of Agriculture), could ultimately benefit all of us, not only those who work with livestock, as bird flu is not the only virus... 

DRC Ebola drawn image demonstrating don't touch sick or dead people

Bangladesh is having a measles nightmare. An outbreak began on 15th March and it has spiralled. On 21st May the Directorate General of Health Services reported a total of 59,279 suspected cases and 8,275 confirmed cases since 15th March - that is just 9 weeks. More than 46,000 people had been hospitalised. By 22nd May 512 people, mainly young children, had died.
They launched a mass immunisation campaign just over a month ago, which has vaccinated 18 million children. 

I've mentioned Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) several times now, there are rises everywhere. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) just published some record-breaking figures. There are 3 times as many Gonorrhea cases and twice as many Syphilis cases as there were in 2015.
No-one is really sure why, but it could be a combination of availability of preventative and post-exposure medications making people blasé, dating apps. giving more people access to multiple partners, and a post-pandemic surge in dating. There are also more people being tested, so it finds asymptomatic cases, but that's nowhere close to the entire increase.
Whatever it is, protect yourself people! Be sensible and adult when doing adult things. 

A study has been released by the FDA that shows NO CHILD DEATHS have been definitely caused by COVID vaccinations. There are 5 possibles and 2 probables, but none that can be definitely attributed to the vaccinations. The study is dated 5th December 2025, so why wasn't it released at the time? 
If you remember, about 6 months ago US new head of the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) Dr Vinay Prasad said without evidence that 'at least 10 children had been killed by COVID vaccinations' and he'd show us the proof. He made changes to vaccinations based on this claim.
I guess the proof didn't say what he hoped it would... 

A massive report from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health on "Cancer incidence, mortality, survival and prevalence in Norway" has found an overall improvement in mortality rates and 5 year survival. There's a dip and rise in skin and breast cancer where screening was paused and resumed due to COVID restrictions, but otherwise the picture is stable and improved.
Norway has a very high rate of mRNA COVID vaccination, so hopefully this will put a lid on the people saying mRNA vaccines cause cancer, because they clearly DO NOT. 
Health officials suggest rising cancer rates elsewhere in the world, including the USA, are most likely due to lifestyle.

Met Office water safety advice

I wrote a post on the Bundibugyo Ebolavirus outbreak in DRC on Wednesday 20th. A lot has happened since then... 
The latest risk assessment from WHO:
National to DRC - Very High 
Regional - High 
Global - Remains Low

The belief among all of the virologists and epidemiologists that I am reading is still that this will not cause a worldwide pandemic. Also, for those asking, Ebolavirus will not "go airborne". It is a disease deep within the cells of the body that is spread by body fluids (including blood, sweat and tears). Sure, you can sneeze it out if you are fairly poorly, but that's still body fluids and not "airborne". 

To 27th May as per the latest WHO report...
In DRC:
1,031 cases (125 confirmed)
240 deaths (17 confirmed)
In Uganda:
9 confirmed cases (unconfirmed reports that 2 have recovered)
1 confirmed death 

Confirmed cases of Ebola have not gone up very quickly, as until now DRC only had capacity to run 40 tests a day. Last week a lack of power meant they could only process 20 tests.

DRC Head of State on Thursday issued directives to contain the epidemic, including "the rapid deployment of teams and infrastructure, enhanced monitoring of affected areas, with barrier methods (handwashing, temperature checks) made mandatory in high-risk zones". 
Easy to say, in places far harder to do. Associated Press reported from a refugee camp. They have 1 handwashing station and 1 infrared thermometer, and 10,000 people. 

Ugandan Health Ministry Ebola is not witchcraft photo of thinking woman and man in doctors clothes with speech bubbles. He tells her this is a myth, it is a virus

The citizens of rural DRC don't really have access to TV or libraries, world news or the internet, they live a very different life to most of us. 
Their Government were ousted, and rebels and the military are fighting. Around 100,000 people have been forced to flee their homes just in the last few months, and in Ituri Province, which is where the outbreak is centred, there are around 1 MILLION displaced people. There is widespread mistrust of authority. Hospitals don't often even have a lab, and wait days for test results for symptomatic patients. A lot of people don't believe Ebolavirus is real, and want to leave. Getting simple vital equipment into the remote areas is almost impossible, so educating people is absolutely vital, but harder said than done.
There are common beliefs that Ebola illness is witchcraft, or a disease invented and spread by white people. To the naive eye people go to get medical aid, and they die. The body of someone who has died from Ebola is infectious, so cases often centre around deceased people and funerals. It feels like a curse on the family. None of this helps. 
On 21st May at Rwampara Hospital parents attempted to forcibly take the body of their son in order to bury him, and weren't allowed. An angry crowd built up, and 2 tents being used to treat Ebola patients in isolation were set on fire. The tents were supplied and being staffed by ALIMA (the Alliance for International Medical Action). Fortunately no-one was hurt, but the 6 patients had to be moved inside the main hospital building, which then went into lockdown. 
On Saturday angry crowds set fire to a treatment centre. People suspected to have Ebola fled in panic, with 18 not returning. No-one knows where they are, and they're not likely to return, even if they become very ill.
On Sunday there was a 3rd incident. 7 Ebola patients escaped from a hospital in Monbgwalu, after it was attacked by angry relatives demanding the bodies of their loved ones. There was chaos and gunfire from police, as staff desperately attempted to move patients to safety.
Red Cross/Red Crescent workers are now under armed guard as they attempt to safely bury deceased patients. 
It might all seem ridiculous to us, but the truth is that a lot of these people don't have anything else, their loved ones are all they have left. They are grieving, confused and very scared.

Contact tracing and follow up in Uganda is working well, as one new patient drove Uganda's first confirmed case and another is a healthcare worker who cared for them. The 3rd new case is a DRC national who travelled while symptomatic. The 4th and 5th are both healthcare workers in Kampala. 
It is horrific that 3 healthcare workers have been infected. If they didn't know they were working with Ebola patients then there isn't enough screening. If they were working with Ebola patients they weren't protected enough. Either way, they could have infected other patients and staff, as well as people outside the hospital, and could have contaminated surfaces wherever they've been.

Uganda Ebola update 23rd May wit text explaining the same as my text previous to the image

Three Red Cross volunteers have died from Ebola in DRC. They were working on unrelated burials before the Ebola outbreak was known, and are among the first victims. 
The DRC Ministry of Health has publicly acknowledged that several frontline Ebola responders, including doctors, nurses and hygienists have died. 
These people step in to protect others (in a warzone) at real personal risk. Utterly tragic they were found by something that proved even more dangerous to them than guns.

A huge collection of the world's top virologists have published a paper where they estimate when this Ebola outbreak began, and the answer is that this lineage most likely emerged between late March and late April.
The official announcement was on 15th May. 
This means it was potentially spreading for 3-7 weeks before anyone realised there was a problem. This is why we have so many cases, over such a large area, right from the start. It wasn’t the start. 

Developing vaccines and treatments for the Bundibugyo Ebolavirus is urgent.
When the 2013–2016 West African 'Zaire Ebola' outbreak ocurred, the Oxford Vaccine Group (OVG) and the Jenner Institute trialled a vaccine. It was found safe and effective, and has been used in outbreaks since then. They spent the last 10 years working on vaccines for other types of Ebolavirus. 
The OVG is working with Oxford’s Clinical BioManufacturing Facility and the Serum Institute of India to rapidly produce and scale doses of their Bundibugyo Ebolavirus candidate vaccine ChAdOx1 BDBV.

WHO have published their recommendations for treatments and vaccines to trial.
- Therapeutic medicines: "the monoclonal antibodies MBP134 and Maftivimab®, as well as the antiviral remdesivir.
Combination therapy using a monoclonal antibody and remdesivir is also recommended for evaluation."
- Post-Exposure Prophylaxis: the oral antiviral Obeldesivir, in the hope it prevents close contacts from developing Ebola or becoming severely ill.
- Vaccines: The most promising candidate was determined to be the single-dose rVSV Bundibugyo vaccine (being developed by the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative or IAVI). It is likely to be 7–9 months before this single dose vaccine is ready for clinical trial.
Their second choice is ChAdOx1 Bundibugyo (OVG/Serum Institute of India), which could potentially become available for clinical trial within 2–3 months.
Additionally Ervebo, which is used against Zaire Ebolavirus, can be clinically trialled. It is unclear whether it will be in any way effective against Bundibugyo. 

UK Government are sending £20m (over US$26.8 million) in aid to the Ebola outbreak.
The funds are to improve access to water, hygiene and protection for the affected communities. 

ALIMA DRC announcement tents set on fire

Uganda and Rwanda have both closed the border with DRC. Uganda has also mandated a 21 day quarantine for anyone returning from DRC. 
Uganda previously suspended all flights and public transport to and from DRC, which instantly had a massive effect on trade, for people with a very limited income. Sadly, as WHO warn, this is likely to cause a lot of people to continue doing what they were doing, but at unofficial border crossings with no border checks. 

Much more usefully, Uganda have stated all media must dedicate 30 prime time minutes a day to public education on Ebola. Genius.

Since 21st May all US nationals and permanent residents who have visited the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), South Sudan or Uganda in the past 21 days have to enter the US through Washington-Dulles International airport, where they will have enhanced Ebola screening. Non-residents or nationals who have visited those countries in the last 3 weeks are barred from entry. 
The slimmed down new look US CDC has asked employees for volunteers to screen people for Ebola at airports. 18 months ago, pre-DOGE, the CDC had actual trained staff for these sort of jobs. 

Canada has rolled out enhanced Ebola screening and Quarantine Officers at major ports of entry. Travelers from affected regions were being asked about previous travel and possible symptoms, but from Wednesday Canada suspended immigration documents for residents of DRC, Uganda and South Sudan for 90 days, and imposed a 21 day quarantine for Canadians returning from affected areas. Medics who regularly volunteer for a month at a time overseas have said it is a deal-breaker for them.

Mexico has introduced Ebola screening measures at airports, asked people ‌to ‌avoid travel to the DRC and arrivals from affected areas have a 21 day quarantine. This puts them in line with the US and Canada ahead of the FIFA football World Cup.

India activated health surveillance at international airports on 21st May, and issued a formal advisory for passengers arriving from Ebola-affected countries, requiring anyone with known exposure or symptoms to present themselves to health authorities. 

Thailand on Tuesday imposed a mandatory 21-day quarantine for all travellers arriving from the DRC and Uganda. 

DRC's World Cup football squad have been told they must isolate themselves in a bubble for 21 days before entering the US. They're currently in Belgium training and none of them actually live in DRC as they all play for teams abroad, so as risk goes, they're all probably as safe as we are. 

DRC Ebola is not witchcraft text with image of weird snake looking ebola virus

An Air France flight from Paris to Detroit was barred from landing in the US because a passenger on board was allegedly a DRC citizen who had recently visited home. The captain made an announcement they were diverting to Montreal, and then the staff put masks on - which really must have been scary for the passengers on board. The traveller, who had no symptoms, disembarked and then the flight was allowed to continue to Detroit. 
There are unconfirmed reports the US travel restrictions were announced while he was in the air. But why would that suggest he had Ebola? Why dump the poor guy in Canada? How does Canada feel about this? If he had actually had Ebola then what about all the people he'd been flying with, who just carried on with their journeys? So many questions, so much pointlessness.

The American aid worker surgeon evacuated from DRC to Germany reportedly contracted Ebola while performing what was believed to be a routine gallbladder surgery. 
When he left DRC he was barely able to stand unaided. He still has crippling stomach issues, fever etc. but is improving and has been able to eat.
The American aid worker evacuated to the Czech rep. is blogging his quarantine. He had a high risk exposure, but so far has no symptoms, and frankly is just grateful to everyone for his care, and also that his colleague in Germany is showing recovery. 

Hold the press! A Nairobi court has put the following on hold, barring government agencies and officials in Kenya from "establishing, operationalising, facilitating, approving or permitting" any Ebola-related quarantine, isolation or treatment centre from any foreign government.  What was the plan? Well... 
The Trump administration announced an arrangement to send any high risk or exposed US citizens to Kenya - for treatment in a pre-fab facility that will be cobbled together in just a week. The US has its own high tech facilities and trained staff, but no. Ebola is too much to contemplate for the US Administration. Marko Rubio on Wednesday:
"We cannot and will not allow any cases of Ebola to enter the United States".
It doesn't seem fair on Kenya and or on anyone sent there instead of home. The Kenyan public were furious, saying it puts them at risk and the US is using them as a dumping ground. Kenyan medical unions threatened strike action, calling it 'an apartheid healthcare model'. Kenyan authorities said it's reciprocal because, for example, 'Kenyans go abroad for Cancer treatment'. On Thursday night it turned out the US is giving Kenya $13.5m towards "Ebola preparedness", so... yeah. 
If it does go ahead (and it probably will somewhere), the facility will have 50 beds (potential to expand to 250) and be staffed by U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (military) - who have already received deployment orders, and this week received 3 days training. It’s not really fair on them either, is it? (Run a high risk biosecurity unit with 3 days training? No thanks.)

While we're on the US Administration, Trump has apparently banned staff from speaking to WHO about the Ebola outbreak without prior permission. They're allowed to attend some meetings in a "listening" capacity only. 

Ugandan health officials have said that the US approached them in regards to opening a facility for at-risk and infected US nationals, but they are already too busy. Interestingly the spokeswoman said that it's not an issue, it's sensible to keep people in Africa if they are exposed in Africa, and that this is a problem of "world security". She makes good points, but Kenya? Still not fair. 

India issued a health alert on Tuesday when a Ugandan national from Kampala developed symptoms in Bengaluru. Bundibugyo testing was negative - she will need to be retested as it's common for negative tests even in the first couple of days of symptoms. 
We really, REALLY do not want Ebola to break out in India.

The Netherlands, Austria and a few other countries have also isolated patients who have recent travel to affected areas and have developed symptoms. As a reminder, initial Ebola symptoms are very common - flu-like illness, fever, gastric problems. This will happen a lot. 

Drawn image of pregnant woman with visible baby in tummy

King's College Hospital in south London has opened a 6 bed space rooftop garden outdoor intensive care ward. Patients can be connected to weatherproof power and oxygen, and there are canopies so that it can be used in the rain. 
It's hoped that being among flowerbeds and fresh air may speed recovery, and give the patients and the staff a boost to mental health too.
The ward has cost £2m in planning, design and construction, and what a fantastic thing it is. 

Phew! Well done, you made it this far, and I can remind you of some great news - COVID levels are really low, in some places the lowest since 2020. See, I remembered...  Something else to celebrate, it is the weekend, and I for one will be taking a 2 day break away from all news!! I think I've earnt it and it'll be treat enough, but it's also my partner's birthday, so there'll be cake and presents and merrymaking. I hope you all have something to enjoy, make plenty of smiles and take a break from stress - you earnt it and you deserve it. 
Barring a 3rd disease outbreak or anything else spectacular, I shall be back in 2 weeks. Until then...

Wash Your Hands, Wear A Hat, Save The NHS...



They look like numbers, but they're all people. 
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Sources:


Images

Uganda Ebola total now 5 - image 
https://x.com/i/status/2058105562362188016
Uganda ebola images
https://x.com/i/status/2058144945760772520
Red Cross volunteers died DRC and images 
https://x.com/i/status/2058162124766007786
Water safety UK images
https://x.com/i/status/2059638770412998857
Ebola isn't witchcraft image
https://x.com/i/status/2059862505027997724
Dr Tedros is on his way to Ituri 
https://x.com/i/status/2059936929618006514
Great ebola image - don't touch liquids from infected or deceased people
https://x.com/i/status/2060292095525502987
No-one should drown - WHO water safety image
https://x.com/i/status/2060296645816811570
ALIMA tents set on fire image 
https://x.com/i/status/2057493521041436989
Drc ebola image in french
https://x.com/i/status/2057496468877980056
DRC wash your hands
https://x.com/i/status/2057497226000101447



Text Sources

Strikes: Resident doctors announce four day walkout in June | The BMJ


Health authorities detect a new case of hantavirus among Spaniards in quarantine
WHO 12 cases Hantavirus
13th positive Hantavirus 
 Hantavirus update 22nd May PM WHO
Quarantine period Spain all mixing together

US Hondius passenger wishes to leave. 
Archived
Hondius passenger wants to leave

Highlights from rapid risk assessment of #hantavirus cluster linked to MV Hondius:
WHO Hantavirus sit rep
Hantavirus update Thursday 18th May
Hantavirus update Thurs 18th May WHO

Bird flu detected in dead Arctic polar bear in European first | The Independent

A $2M USDA grant will fund research on the infectivity of bird flu in the air




WHO sit rep
Daily Ebola update:
Thurs night 
1,031 cases / 240 deaths (removed people who tested negative)
BNO Thursday night 
Uganda. 2 recoveries. 1 death. Only 4 active cases.
Wednesday 
- Cases: 1,205 (+156)
- Deaths: 264 (+23)
Daily update ebola Sunday 1,005 + 5, 230 +1
Monday
854 (112 confirmed) cases, 179 deaths


Angry crowd sets fire to hospital tents incident 1 
Ebola spread by white men
Ebola fire and body taking
1.06 21st May 
Attempted intrusion at Rwampara hospital
Incident 2
Ebola treatment centre set fire second time 
Ebola hospital 3rd incident
Ebola hospital attacked 
3rd incident police fire shots

One handwashing station and 1 thermal thermometer 

Links only WHO UN Bundibugyo
On 19 May 2026, DrTedros convened the first meeting of the International Health Regulations (IHR) Emergency Committee regarding the epidemic of Ebola disease caused by Bundibugyo virus in the Democratic Republic of the Congo DRC and Uganda
As of 22 May 2026, the WHO Secretariat assessed the risk for these States Parties as “Very high” for the DRC and as “High” for Uganda.
Risk level - Very high DRC, high Uganda, Low world

Hospitals don't have labs - days for test results

Sources Bundibugyo 


- It’s not Ebola virus but it’s an ebolavirus and it causes Ebola virus disease.
“Bundibugyo” is not a strain of Ebola virus — it is a separate species within the Ebolavirus genus, distinct from Zaire ebolavirus and Sudan ebolavirus. A strain is a smaller genetic variation within a species


Latest WHO 29 May

WHO Risk Assessment 

DRC Head of State directives Thursday 

Uganda up to 7 confirmed cases - 2 healthcare workers 

Blind spot 3-7 weeks Ebola 
Ebola outbreak began in between late March and late April.

Why Ebolavirus isn't going to go airborne 

UK scientists developing Ebola vaccine that could be ready for trials in months
Oxford candidate vaccine

WHO clinical trials of vaccines and therapeutics 

Ebola Vaccine Could Take 6 to 9 Months as Suspected Cases Hit 600, WHO Says


For the ongoing #Ebola outbreak in #DRC here are the therapeutics being considered:
Krutika Kuppalli MD FIDSA 

The border with rwanda closed
Uganda b9rder closed

Uganda ministry of health - border closed 

US begins enhanced airport screening as race to contain Ebola outbreak continues | CIDRAP

Canada border screening Ebola 

DR Congo's World Cup team told to isolate | World News | Sky News

The Ebola outbreak is posing massive challenges for medical aid organisations, a senior humanitarian official has said.

A lot of misinformation about Ebola is circulating right now. Key facts:
- It spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids from someone who is sick.
- People are NOT contagious before symptoms begin.
- Early supportive care saves lives.
- Travel bans don’t stop outbreaks — surveillance, testing, IPC, and community trust do.
- Frontline health workers and affected communities deserve support, not fearmongering.
Ebola basics Krutika Kuppalli MD FIDSA 

CDC asks for volunteers for airport Ebola screening

Canada is no longer treating the Ebola outbreak as a distant regional event.

Airfrance flight diverted
Passenger was already on board

Surgeon gallbladder op Bundibugyo 
Surgeon Bundibugyo improving 
2nd medic no Bundibugyo symptoms 

9 months until vaccine ready

Background on civil war in DRC - Also 9 months until vaccine ready

NYT exposed Americans will go to Kenya
Deployment to staff Kenyan Ebola clinic
Krutika comment on deployment to Kenya
3 days training for Kenya Ebola facility staff

No Ebola will enter US Marko Rubio 

World Cup travel measures

Kenyans livid

Kenyan deal not yet signed
Kenya announces deal

Kenyan facility will be built in a week

America gives Kenya $13.5m towards "Ebola preparedness"

Kenyans don't want US Ebola facility

Kenyan court says no!
Kenyan court blocks US Ebola facility


Global health security say Uganda

India Bengaluru Ugandan woman develops symptoms

India arrivals must declare Bundibugyo exposure or symptoms 

Canada and Thailand mandatory quarantine ebola 

Dutch hospital RadboudUMC admits patient possibly infected with Ebola virus | NL Times
Ebola ruled out 
Austrian suspected - tests negative

DRC Ministry of Health UK sending £20m

Trump bans NIAID staff from talking to WHO

40 tests a day

Ebola Ends









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