No Vaccine for Bundibugyo Ebola Outbreak, Health Officials Say
395 suspected cases, 106 deaths, two countries, no approved vaccine, no procurement pipeline — Shanelle Hall's PBS quote names what the institutional silence had not.
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Bureau: Chicago
395 suspected cases, 106 deaths, two countries, no approved vaccine, no procurement pipeline — Shanelle Hall's PBS quote names what the institutional silence had not.
Jean Kaseya's continental agency named the U.S. travel ban; the WHO director-general spent Day Nine producing situation reports without naming the policy.
The pasta alert the paper carried for two weeks was terminated in November — the active live document on the FSIS page heading into Memorial Day Monday is a Chicago headcheese.
The CDC's Thursday print held through the holiday weekend — 1,952 cases for the year, 336 short of 2025 — and the largest single outbreak of the year is now formally over.
USDA Food Safety puts the day's whole food-poisoning prevention rail in four cooking temperatures and one out-time limit — the rest is hand-washing and a cooler.
Record holiday road volume meets the National Safety Council's projection of roughly 437 traffic deaths — the household number behind the AAA travel-record headline.
Three multistate Salmonella strains, 184 sick across 31 states, 53 hospitalized, one Washington death — the federal counter has not moved over the holiday and the pediatric share is still a quarter.
Twelve cases (ten confirmed), three deaths, no new death in over twenty days — the captain walked off in Rotterdam, and the Nebraska eighteen clear quarantine May 31.
The open correction holds — CDC NCHS's provisional 2025 total is 69,973, down 13.9 percent from 81,313, the third consecutive annual decline and the steepest in a generation.
The structural answer landed on Saturday — no Bundibugyo vaccine is being actively considered — and Monday extends the same finding by one document with no sponsor having moved a press line.