Marburg causes lives to be taken.
Furthermore Marburg is spread by physical contact with others and has a 1:4 kill rate. Marburg has many symptoms or side effects such as fever, chills, headaches, myalgia, nausea, chest pain, diarrhea, jaundice, inflammation of the pancreas, weight loss, delirium, shock, and liver failure which can all happen in a five to ten day incubation period. For example, you will know you have Marburg in the first five days when “a nonpruritic rash [appears], followed by nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, bone pain, and abdominal pain.” So when the virus of Marburg gets inside your body in those five to ten days you are likely to get the symptoms.
More in depth Marburg virus is very rare to be seen in certain place, so very little is known about it.
Marburg has no cure so far, but there is experimentations being done on non-humans. Many places are not prepared to take this disease on. For instance, many places are not ready to deal with Marburg so “ to improve the acceptability of the response to the host community, physiologic and cultural factors needed to be considered at all stages of planning and implementation in the isolation ward.” This means that many places around the world need to know how to isolate the virus from the community, so everyone doesn’t get the virus.
The first person that had gotten Marburg virus was Klaus F. He had died two weeks after getting Marburg. On August 8, 1967 when Klaus F. was clueless as to what he was dealing with he made one of the biggest mistakes. “ Klaus F. Had fed the monkeys and washed their cages” and in doing this took no bio safety level precautions (Preston 36). Since, he didn't take these precautions he caused himself to get the virus and die.
The future for the Marburg virus is unknown there are people trying to help the communities and countries that may get this virus. The CDC had tried to help the people in Uganda, so there wouldn't be an outbreak killing people. The people are learning to recognize the virus, to control the virus, and save the lives of many
people.