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A Ugandan scientist's trail camera footage has revealed new insights into how the deadly Marburg virus may spread through bat ...
Marburg virus is one of the world’s deadliest pathogens. Closely related to Ebola, it causes hemorrhagic fever with mortality ...
CSL will consolidate its R&D teams around six sites located in biotech hubs as the company looks to boost external ...
Opinion
The Manila Times on MSN4dOpinion
The cost of abandonment: America’s WHO walkout
By law, the withdrawal cannot take full effect until early 2026, due to a required one-year notice period. But the order also instructed an immediate halt to US contributions and a phased pullout of ...
A 25-year-old local scientist captured rare footage showing how one of the world’s deadliest viruses could jump from bats to ...
Conclusion Marburg virus disease remains a significant global health threat due to its high fatality rate, zoonotic origin, and potential for human-to-human transmission.
How does Marburg virus spread between species? Young Ugandan scientist's photos give important clues by Alexander Richard Braczkowski, The Conversation edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Andrew Zinin ...
Some stood just metres from a known Marburg virus reservoir. Importantly, the Uganda Wildlife Authority has built a sanctioned viewing platform about 35 metres from the cave.
Marburg virus articles from across Nature Portfolio Marburg virus is an infectious agent belonging to the virus family Filoviridae, which also includes the Ebolavirus genus, and causes a rare and ...
The US Department of Health and Human Services is weighing whether to fund new Marburg and Sudan Ebola virus vaccines even as Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. overhauls the US immunization landscape, ...