Epidemics can occur anywhere, at any time.
We publish regular updates, produced by Program for Monitoring Emerging Diseases (ProMED), on outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases to keep you informed on the frequency and impact of our priority diseases.
ProMED is the largest publicly-available system conducting global reporting of infectious diseases outbreaks, with ProMED staff, moderators and team members scanning for, reviewing and posting information relating to global health security from official health reports and media articles.
The below post contains information from health reports, news articles, and academic papers relating to our priority diseases, compiled together by ProMED. Content below may be edited from original ProMED posts for style and length.
These posts provide an overview of disease outbreak activity over the past several weeks. For the latest information relating to outbreaks of infectious diseases, please visit the ProMED website.
Ebola
Location
North Kivu and Ituri provinces, DRC
Outbreak Update
WHO AFRO Ebola Dashboard, 2 October 2019
3201 cases (including 3 new confirmed cases), of which 3087 confirmed
114 probable cases, 427 suspected cases
88 cases in last 21 days
995 survivors
2137 deaths
2K contacts being followed out of 8.2K identified
When Kavira, the 1000th Ebola survivor, left the Ebola Treatment Center, United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres handed Kavira her Ebola survivor certificate in early September [2019]. "I never thought I would make it at 1st, but now that I am cured, I want to go back to my community and tell them to seek treatment early if they are affected, because you can actually survive," said Kavira.
"Every survivor gives us reason and motivation to continue to enhance our fight against Ebola, but every survivor is also a reminder that there are lives we were not able to save," David Gressly, emergency Ebola response coordinator, said. "We have to continue gaining access through improved security for health workers and populations alike, along with continuous efforts to engage communities to be empowered with the response. We cannot win the battle against this outbreak without the full support of the Congolese people.
See here.
See the full ProMED post
MERS
Location
Saudi Arabia
Outbreak Update
Saudi Ministry of Health, 28-5 October 2019
During the period since the last update (27 September) there have been a total of 3 newly
confirmed cases of MERS-CoV plus 4 outcome reports (3
recoveries and 1 fatality).
Information on newly confirmed cases (3):
[1]
Date of confirmation report: 30 Sep 2019
Case no.: 19-1952
MERS in Hufoof city: 39-year-old male in Hufoof city, Al Hassa [Ash Sharqiyah, Eastern] region
Contact with camels: Yes
Case classification: Primary
Date of outcome report: 4 Oct 2019
Outcome: Recovered
[2]
Date of confirmation report: 2 Oct 2019
Case no.: 19-1953
MERS from Abha city: a 33-year-old male from Abha city, Aseer region
Contact with camels: Unknown
Case classification: Primary
Current status: Active
[3]
Date of confirmation report: 5 Oct 2019
Case no.: 19-1954
MERS from Wadi Aldwasir city: a 70-year-old male from Wadi Aldwasir city, Riyadh region
Contact with camels: Unknown
Case classification: Primary
Current status: Active
Information on outcome reports (4)
Fatality (1)
Case no.: 19-1950. Date of confirmation report: 25 Sep 2019. A 74-year-old male from Unaizah, Al Qasim region. Classified as a primary case with unknown history of camel contact. Date of outcome report: 28 Sep 2019. Outcome: died.
Recovery (3)
[1]
Case no.: 19-1949. Date of confirmation report: 19 Sep 2019. A 39-year-old male from Buraidah, Al Qaṣim region. Classified as a primary case with unknown history of camel contact. Date of outcome report: 28 Sep 2019. Outcome: recovered.
[2]
Case no.: 19-1951. Date of confirmation report: 27 Sep 2019. A 41-year-old male from Afeef, Riyadh region. Classified as a primary case with unknown history of camel contact. Date of outcome report: 4 Oct 2019. Outcome: recovered.
[3]
Case no.: 19-1952. [See newly confirmed case [1] above.]
See the full ProMED post