| 03 Novembre 2017
 03 NOVEMBER 2017 | NAIROBI – The World Health  Organization is helping the Kenyan Ministry of Health guard against the  spread of Marburg Virus Disease from neighbouring Uganda.
 
 Health authorities are strengthening preparedness measures in Trans  Nzoia and West Pokot counties along the border with Uganda, where an  outbreak was officially declared on 19 October.
 
 Although no MVD cases have been confirmed in Kenya, the Ministry of  Health has set up a national task force to coordinate all rapid response  activities, including WHO, the Kenya Red Cross Society, the the US  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Médecins Sans  Frontières (MSF) and UNICEF. Several joint teams have been deployed to  conduct risk assessments and initiate contact tracing and surveillance  in Trans Nzoia and West Pokot.
 
 WHO is supporting enhanced surveillance and lab testing, an active  search for potential cases and their contacts, community engagement, and  isolation and treatment units.
 
 “We can save lives if sick people are identified early. Together with  the Ministry of Health, we are actively looking for suspected cases and  following up on their contacts,” said Dr. Rudi Eggers, WHO  Representative in Kenya. “WHO staff in both Uganda and Kenya are  coordinating cross border response activities including surveillance,  contact tracing and active case search. This is key to breaking the  chain of transmission and containing the outbreak.”
 
 A 73-year-old traditional healer in Trans Nzoia County tested negative  for the virus on 01 November, after samples were transported to the  Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) in Nairobi. She had come into  contact with a Ugandan national with confirmed MVD who sought her out  for treatment with herbal remedies.
 
 WHO is working with the Kenyan Ministry of Health to prepare local  hospitals for possible cases, ensure the safe and timely transport of  lab samples, provide information to local communities, and enhance  preparedness measures and cross-border coordination.
 
 WHO has delivered 300 kits of personal protective equipment; with an additional 2,000 PPE kits on the way.
http://www.afro.who.int/news/who-helps-kenya-guard-against-marburg-virus-disease









