The number of confirmed or suspected cases of Ebola in Uganda has risen to 36, according to a WHO spokesperson, who added the disease remains confined to the rural Kibaale district, NPR’s health blog “Shots” reports. “A team, led by the CDC, WHO and Uganda’s Ministry of Health, are now on the scene to determine the scope of the outbreak and then control it,” according to the blog (Doucleff, 7/31). CNN’s “The Chart” blog reports that 14 people have died of the disease, which has a 25 to 90 percent fatality rate in African outbreaks, according to a WHO fact sheet (7/31).

In neighboring Kenya, laboratories are on high alert and protective medical gear is ready in border provinces, and Rwanda “has put in place measures aimed at protecting the public from this deadly disease but is also cautioning Rwandans to remain vigilant and report any suspected cases immediately,” according to a statement from the Ministry of Health, Bloomberg Businessweek notes (Richardson, 7/31). National Geographic examines Ebola, which “is still so mysterious that no one knows how it originated, in which species it hides out between epidemics, … how to treat it,” or how it is transmitted (Than, 7/31).

The KFF Daily Global Health Policy Report summarized news and information on global health policy from hundreds of sources, from May 2009 through December 2020. All summaries are archived and available via search.

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