France on Wednesday, June 24 - France announced its first confirmed case of Ebola identified on its territory, a doctor back from the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is fighting a major outbreak.
The case is the first of the deadly haemorrhagic fever
identified outside the African continent during the current outbreak, which has
also affected Uganda.
It is also the first time Ebola has been detected in France.
In 2014, during a major outbreak in West Africa, two patients were transported
to France, but they had been diagnosed abroad.
The health ministry confirmed the identification of a first
positive case of Ebola virus disease on national territory, specifying that the
case had been identified in mainland France.
The doctor was isolated on arrival in France, even before the
disease was officially identified, according to the ministry. The office of
Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu indicated that the situation is being
monitored very closely.
The Democratic Republic of Congo's 17th Ebola outbreak was
declared on May 15 after several unexplained deaths in the mineral-rich but
volatile eastern Ituri province. The Bundibugyo strain of the virus that has
caused the outbreak currently has no approved vaccine or treatment.
Public health experts estimate that the risk of the outbreak
spreading worldwide remains low, due to the relatively low contagiousness of
the Ebola virus.

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