News

A Ugandan scientist's trail camera footage has revealed new insights into how the deadly Marburg virus may spread through bat ...
Marburg virus outbreak hits Germany: What to know as deadly Ebola-like virus claims 10 lives in Rwanda. 2mo. T wo passengers traveling from Rwanda triggered a health scare at Hamburg Central ...
German police cordoned off part of a train station in Hamburg and isolated two people to reduce the risk of the deadly Marburg virus spreading.. A medical student who was traveling to Hamburg from ...
Hamburg train station in Germany was partially locked down on Wednesday after suspected cases of a deadly virus were detected.
Marburg virus causes severe viral hemorrhagic fever and 24% to 88% of people who contracted the disease in ... It was first reported in 1967 in a town called Marburg in Germany and in ...
A man is seen boarding a train at the central railway station of Hamburg, Germany in May 2015. Two people suspected of having the potentially lethal Marburg virus who traveled on a train at the ...
Both people in Germany tested negative for Marburg, the authorities announced this week, emphasizing that there was no risk to the public. Image Two people who were tested for Marburg virus ...
The Marburg virus has already claimed the lives of nine people in Equatorial Guinea ... The first human cases were identified in 1967 in laboratory outbreaks in Marburg, Germany, and Belgrade ...
Uganda is currently experiencing an outbreak of Marburg virus, ... In this year, the virus was linked to two large outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany and in Belgrade, Serbia.
The rare virus was first identified in 1967 after it caused simultaneous outbreaks of disease in laboratories in Marburg, Germany and Belgrade, according to the CDC..
Marburg virus disease, also known as Marburg hemorrhagic fever, is most often found in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease, initially detected in 1967 after outbreaks in Germany and Serbia, is caused ...
Marburg virus disease, or MVD is a serious, often fatal disease. ... It was first detected in 1967 during twin outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany, and Belgrade, Serbia.