Contributed by Jai A. Dennison| 07 April, 2005  15:00 GMT
 The symptoms of Marburg hemorrhagic fever, and its rapid fatality in the majority of cases, can cause great anxiety in affected populations. This anxiety increases the risk that people in affected areas may flee to other areas, thus fanning wider spread.
Marburg hemorrhagic fever has been reported in a sixth province in northwestern Angola, Kuanza Sul, and the
World Health Organization (WHO) is expressing grave concern over its containment. The latest official count was 200 cases, of which 173 were fatal. However, WHO has noted that some people are dying before reaching hospitals. Therefore, the number of fatalities is almost certainly higher.
The province of Uige, where Marburg initially broke out, remains the epicenter of the epidemic. One person currently is under investigation for Marburg hemorrhagic fever in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which shares a border with Angola.
An increasing number of adults are contracting the disease, which primarily has affected children under the age of five.
Marburg Closely Related to Ebola
WHO says its concern about the further evolution of the outbreak of is fully shared by the Angolan government. Following the on March 21 confirmation of Marburg virus as the causative agent, WHO sent its senior epidemiologists to Uige to assess the situation and organize an initial emergency response.
That assessment prompted a rapid and massive augmentation of support in the form of international teams of specialized staff, presently in Uige and Luanda, and several shipments of supplies. Staff have been drawn from WHO and its partners in the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN). Equipment to strengthen local diagnostic and communication capacity is also now in place.
This escalation of support is continuing, with the government making great efforts to facilitate the rapid influx of staff and supplies and set up the basic infrastructure for a sustained emergency response.
WHO acquired extensive experience in the successful control of viral hemorrhagic fevers, including Ebola, a closely-related disease that is clinically almost identical. Based on its experience, WHO remains confident that the Angolan outbreak can be brought under control. At the same time, however, the implementation of effective control measures faces several significant challenges, some of which may be unique to this outbreak, WHO points out.
First Marburg Outbreak in Urban Setting
Marburg hemorrhagic fever is an extremely rare disease that remains poorly understood. Information on the behaviour of Marburg virus once it enters a human population is sparse. As detailed in a fact sheet recently issued by WHO, the outbreak in Angola is one of only two large outbreaks of this disease that have occurred in indigenous African populations since the virus was first detected in 1967.
The only other large outbreak, which began in late 1998 in the Democratic Republic of Congo, was confined to two sparsely populated villages in an isolated corner of the country. It caused sporadic cases with small chains of transmission over two years and never reached the intensity of transmission seen in just the past few weeks in Angola.
The outbreak in Angola is not only the largest on record, with the highest fatality, but also the first to occur in an urban setting.
Almost three decades of civil unrest have left Angola with a severely weakened health infrastructure, a hospital system in dire need of basic equipment and supplies, inadequate communication and transportation systems, and a population weakened by economic hardship.
These weaknesses hamper containment efforts, which depend on active surveillance for cases, rapid detection and isolation in specially designated and equipped facilities, and rapid tracing of contacts.
People Dying in Community
Based on experiences with Ebola, control measures can have an immediate impact by interrupting chains of transmission. The eventual success of such measures depends on their sustained application, supported by efficient surveillance, and requires very good communication and transportation systems, says WHO.
Such systems presently are not available in Angola and cannot be established quickly. As another consequence of the country’s recent history, hundreds of thousands of landmines are thought to remain in the country, making transportation by rail and road precarious and necessitating air transport of staff and equipment.
Intensified surveillance in Uige over the past few days has determined that some people are not being hospitalized and are dying within the community, creating an urgent need to organize services for the safe collection and burial of deceased persons.
Health Care Workers Vulnerable
Cases in health care workers point to the need to greatly increase supplies of protective equipment for front-line workers, particularly in hard-hit Uige and densely populated Luanda.
WHO has arranged three shipments of this equipment to date; more shipments are on their way. Personal protective equipment is also being supplied by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), M |