Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | Health ministers from 11 African countries are meeting in Uganda over the recent outbreak of the Ebola virus disease in the East African country.
The ministers are discussing cross-border collaboration for preparedness and response to the Ebola disease, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) country office in Uganda.
Uganda’s Ministry of Health, which is a co-host with the African Union, Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the WHO, said the meeting will strengthen and enhance collaboration in response to the hemorrhagic fever and other public health emergencies.
Today,Rt. Hon. Prime Minister, @RobinahNabbanja officially opened the Emergency Ministerial Meeting on Preparedness and Response to Ebola. This meeting discusses best ways to strengthen and enhance cross border collaboration in response to #EbolaOutbreakUG and other emergencies pic.twitter.com/bMfeHX2uAx
— Dr. Jane Ruth Aceng Ocero (@JaneRuth_Aceng) October 12, 2022
Senior WHO officials, headed by Michael Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program, are attending the meeting.
Uganda is grappling with the outbreak of the rare Sudan strain of Ebola virus disease, which was first announced on Sept. 20 in the central region of the country. Ugandan Health Ministry data as of Oct. 9 showed that the country has registered 48 confirmed cases of Ebola and 17 deaths.
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Xinhua