The health organisation stressed that people need to stay alert and do what they must to stop the Congo virus from spreading.
Since the first case of CCHF in a person was found in 1976, the NIH says there have been a few more in different parts of the country. Even though Balochistan is still the most affected province, each year, cases are reported from all over the country. Balochistan reported 19 possible cases in 2021. Of these, 14 were confirmed, and five people died.
People can get the disease from ticks or animal blood that is infected.
CCHF can be passed from an infected person to a healthy person through contact with their blood, saliva, or other body fluids.
Hospital-acquired CCHF infections can also happen when medical equipment isn't cleaned well enough, when infection control protocols aren't followed when injection needles are used more than once, or when infected medical supplies are used.
The National Institutes of Health said, "Because it spreads from person to person and has a high death rate, it is important to rule out CCHF by taking a careful epidemiological history and clinical exam of the patient and following all of the hospital infection control measures."
Anyone who had contact with animals in an area where the disease is common and had a fever that started quickly, lasted more than three days but less than ten days, and showed signs of bleeding.
A suspected case with a 10-day history of fever, the signs and symptoms listed above, and an epidemiological link to places where CCHF is common. The suspect or likely case where CCHF has been confirmed by a lab (PCR & serology).
The NIH says that no widely available vaccine is both safe and effective at this time.
It was said that if there isn't a vaccine, the only way to keep people from getting sick is to get rid of the risk factors and teach people how to stay healthy.
Trying to stop infections from spreading from animals to people:
Wear gloves and other protective clothing when working with animals or their parts in areas where the disease is common, especially when killing, butchering, or culling animals at home or in slaughterhouses.
Before being slaughtered, animals should be put in quarantine (maybe for 30 days) or treated with acaricides often. Animals with ticks should be injected with ivermectin for 24 to 30 days before being slaughtered.
Reducing the danger of human-to-human infection transfer in the community:
Avoid close physical contact with those afflicted with CCHF; Use gloves and other equipment when caring for unwell individuals; wash hands often with soap after watching for or visiting ill individuals.
Observe proper burial procedures by avoiding contact with the dead patient's mucous membranes and bodily fluids and wearing the necessary PPE when handling the body.
It noted that the incubation time after contact with contaminated blood or tissues is usually 5 to 6 days, with a maximum known time of 13 days.