The World Health Organization (WHO) has updated the Marburg outbreak in Ethiopia, revealing six confirmed cases including three deaths with two hundred and six contacts identified.
Recall on 12 November 2025, WHO noted a press release from Ethiopian Ministry of Health (MoH) and the Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI), announcing suspected viral hemorrhagic viral fever (VHF) in Jinka town, South Ethiopia Regional State, Ethiopia.
On 14 November 2025, the Ministry of Health of Ethiopia confirmed that the cases previously reported as suspected VHF were Marburg virus disease (MVD). While molecular testing conducted by the National Reference Laboratory at EPHI identified Marburg virus (MARV) in patient samples.
According to WHO’s statement on Friday stated that this marks the first confirmed outbreak of MVD in the country as the initial investigation by the One Health team in Ethiopia shows the presence of the natural host of the virus, fruit bats, in the area.
MVD is a severe, often fatal illness, transmitted from bats to humans, and clinically similar to Ebola virus diseases. The disease has a case fatality ratio of up to 88%, but it can be much lower with good and early patient care.
In addition to the lab-confirmed cases, a further three epidemiologically linked cases could not be tested; all three are deceased and recorded as probable cases.
A total of 206 contacts have been identified, and contacts are under active follow-up. The number of contacts will continue to change as the response evolves. The source of the infection has not yet been identified.
Which includes outbreak investigation, contact tracing, and alert management, case management, infection prevention and control measures, laboratory capacity, risk communication and community engagement.
Moreso, WHO assessed the public health risk posed by the outbreak as high at the national level, moderate at the regional level and low at the global level.