Rwanda’s health minister said Sunday that an outbreak of the Marburg virus is not spreading in the country, citing the ...
A deadly, Ebola-like virus called Marburg is currently causing an outbreak in Rwanda. The country declared an outbreak of ...
Officials confirmed Wednesday suspected German cases of the deadly Marburg virus tested negative, following fears the Ebola-like virus spread to the European country, as experts in several African ...
The country's health minister cited the absence of new infections and deaths in the past six days. View on euronews ...
The virus causes a severe viral hemorrhagic fever, according to the World Health Organization. It was first detected in 1967 during twin outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany ...
The Marburg virus causes a severe hemorrhagic fever, much like its more well-known cousin, the Ebola virus. First identified in 1967 during simultaneous outbreaks in Germany (Marburg and Frankfurt ...
Hamburg train station in Germany was partially locked down on Wednesday after suspected cases of a deadly virus were detected ...
when outbreaks happened in labs in Marburg and Frankfurt (both in Germany) and in Serbia (formerly Belgrade, Yugoslavia). In 2023, there were outbreaks of the virus in Tanzania (resulting in five ...
The Marburg virus, named after the German town where it was first identified in 1967, is a hemorrhagic fever virus in the same family as Ebola. Its symptoms start with sudden high fever ...
The CDC has issued a Level 3 travel advisory for Rwanda due to an outbreak of the Marburg virus. The agency will also screen ...
The virus was first identified in Marburg, a city in Germany, and Belgrade, Serbia, in 1967, after laboratory work with African green monkeys from Uganda led to human infections, according to the WHO.
First identified during an outbreak in 1967 in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany, as well as Belgrade, Serbia, the virus was linked to African green monkeys imported from Uganda. Since then ...