Ebola virus disease
New publisher/source coverage joined this story cluster: thehawk.in.
Source-first newsroom desks
The Edge of Epidemiology
A source-first infectious disease newsroom for reporters, editors, and public-health analysts who need to know what changed, how trustworthy it is, and where to click next.
The core live files that deserve attention before the wider desk.
New publisher/source coverage joined this story cluster: thehawk.in.
Cambodianess now explicitly uses investigation or monitoring language.
1 newly observed linked item(s) were added since the last saved snapshot.
The lead item has changed to Britain gets experimental drug from Japan to bolster hantavirus response from Reuters.
High-signal outbreak movements: official alerts, emergency declarations, cross-border spread, contact tracing, case/death shifts, and operational response.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Cumulatively from weeks 1 to 19, the WHO AFR influenza laboratory network has tested 25,293 sentinel surveillance specimens for SARS-CoV-2, of which 785 were positive for SARS-CoV-2 (cumulative positivity rate 3.1%). SARS-CoV-2 In Epiweek 19, of the 908 specimens processed by 12 laboratories in the African Region, a total of 18 specimens tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (positivity of 2%). The following influenza viruses were identified: Influenza A (H1N1)pdm09 (n = 4), Influenza A (H3) (n = 19), Influenza A (subtyping not performed) (n = 36), Influenza B (lineage not determined) (n = 3), and Influenza B (Victoria) (n = 24).
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
New developments that move the reporting picture rather than simply repeat it.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Cumulatively from weeks 1 to 19, the WHO AFR influenza laboratory network has tested 25,293 sentinel surveillance specimens for SARS-CoV-2, of which 785 were positive for SARS-CoV-2 (cumulative positivity rate 3.1%). SARS-CoV-2 In Epiweek 19, of the 908 specimens processed by 12 laboratories in the African Region, a total of 18 specimens tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (positivity of 2%). The following influenza viruses were identified: Influenza A (H1N1)pdm09 (n = 4), Influenza A (H3) (n = 19), Influenza A (subtyping not performed) (n = 36), Influenza B (lineage not determined) (n = 3), and Influenza B (Victoria) (n = 24).
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
A working layer for reporters: what to ask next, which numbers matter, and which framing traps to avoid before you write.
Next move: Pin down whether the transmission language reflects evidence, concern, or pure precaution.
Question: What does the official source actually confirm, and where are follow-up reports going beyond that line?
Next move: Pin down whether the transmission language reflects evidence, concern, or pure precaution.
Question: What does the official source actually confirm, and where are follow-up reports going beyond that line?
Next move: Get a direct official confirmation or denial before the next write-through.
Question: Which public-health or government source has still not spoken on the record, and who should be pressed first?
Next move: Get a direct official confirmation or denial before the next write-through.
Question: Which public-health or government source has still not spoken on the record, and who should be pressed first?
A separate evidence-and-geography layer for where selected pathogens likely emerged, how they traveled, and where they intersect your own writing.
Atlantic mosquito ecology, slavery, empire, and port-city mortality
Yellow fever is one of the clearest examples of a pathogen whose historical geography was shaped by maritime movement, tropical mosquito ecology, port infrastructure, and imperial warfare.
Bay of Bengal ecology, empire, troop movement, and recurring pandemic waves
Cholera is the classic map disease for showing how river basins, pilgrimage, military movement, and commercial shipping can convert a local ecology into repeated global pandemic waves.
Dense settlement, cattle-linked ancestry, and colonial spread into immunologically naive populations
Measles has a partly reconstructed deeper origin story from molecular-clock work, while its colonial spread is brutally visible in the Americas and Pacific.
Forest-zone recognition, animal trade jumps, and networked global spread
Mpox combines a geographically anchored Central and West African history with wildlife-trade export events and a distinct twenty-first-century pattern of networked global transmission.
Major outbreaks, regional developments, and the cross-border signals worth following now.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Recommendations and Reports / May 21, 2026 / 75(1);1â14 Nikhil Ranadive, MD 1 ,2 ,3 ; Joel L.N. Ridpath, MD 2 ( View author affiliations ) Guidance for Enhanced Investigation for Suspected Autochthonous Malaria Transmission During 2023, 10 cases of locally acquired mosquito-transmitted (autochthonous) malaria were reported to CDC from four U.S. states after a 20-year period with no autochthonous cases.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Only a brief source description was available at publication time.
Notably, H3N2 subtype AIVs exhibited dual receptor-binding properties, recognizing both SA α-2,3-Gal and SA α-2,6-Gal receptors. Overall, these findings indicate that H3 subtype AIVs have the potential for cross-species transmission and highlight the importance of continued surveillance of H3 subtype AIVs circulating in nature. Seven H3 subtype AIVs isolated between 2014 and 2021, including five H3N2, one H3N3, and one H3N6 strain, were analyzed.
Source: Virulence
Why it matters: Directly relevant to outbreak detection, transmission monitoring, or response. Comes from an official or primary-source channel.
Evidence caveat: Interpret in light of study design, setting, sample size, and how directly the findings travel to the current outbreak picture.
PubMed and EMBASE were searched on June 30, 2025, for studies meeting the following predefined criteria: observational design, adverse events (AEs), mRNA-1273 boosters (dose 3+), and population data from the South-East Asia and Western-Pacific regions. Of 886 records screened, 27 studies from eight countries (Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Singapore) met the inclusion criteria. Long-term safety monitoring is needed to guide public-health responses to evolving SARS-CoV-2 variants.
Source: Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics
Why it matters: Useful for mechanism, transmission, or surveillance context beyond the daily story file.
Evidence caveat: Interpret in light of study design, setting, sample size, and how directly the findings travel to the current outbreak picture.
Pathogen: Ebola viruses, including Bundibugyo virus in the current DRC/Uganda outbreak
Ebola remains a defining outbreak-desk disease because healthcare transmission, funeral practices, laboratory capacity, community trust, and international alarm can all move faster than the confirmed count.
Pathogen: Hantaviruses, including Andes virus in the Americas
This is a rare but frightening severe-disease story where a single unusual cluster can force questions about travel safety, rodent exposure, and whether Andes-virus-style person-to-person spread is in play.
Pathogen: Measles virus
Measles is a clean reporter desk disease because it reveals vaccination gaps, school and household spread, travel-linked importation, and public-health capacity all at once.