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Uganda has begun a test vaccination program for the Ebola strain Viral infection that is behind the last outbreak of the country, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), while the number of confirmed cases has increased to three.
Last week, the Eastern Africa country announced an Ebola outbreak in the capital, Kampala, with a single case, a nurse who died on January 29.
The total number of cases has now increased to three, with the two additional cases of the family of the deceased man, the spokesman of the Ministry of Health, Emmanuel Ainebyaona, on Monday night, told Reuters.
In a publication on platform X on Monday night, Matshidiso Moeti, Who director of AfricaHe said that Uganda had also begun a clinical trial of a vaccine against Ebola Sudan strain.
Currently, there is no approved vaccine for that strain. The existing vaccination is for The Zaire strainthat is behind a recent outbreak in the neighboring democratic republic of the Congo.
“This marks an important milestone in the Public Health emergency response and demonstrates the power of collaboration for global health security,” Moeti said. “If it is shown that the vaccine will even more strengthen measures to protect future outbreaks.”
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Bruce Kirenga, who runs the Makerere Lung Institute Institute, a research organization that is making the trial, told local media during The launch of vaccination that had been developed by the International AIDS vaccine initiative (IAVI) and that the Institute had received around 2,460 doses.
The Ministry of Health said last week that the trial would direct confirmed cases contacts.
A highly ease disease, the symptoms of ebola infection include bleeding, headache and muscle pains. The virus is transmitted through contact with infected body fluids and tissue.