Ebola scare at Glasgow hospital ends after patient tests negative

01 July 2026 , 08:46
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Ebola scare at Glasgow hospital ends after patient tests negative
Ebola scare at Glasgow hospital ends after patient tests negative

A patient feared to have the deadly and contagious Ebola virus at a Glasgow hospital has tested negative, health officials have confirmed.

Precautionary measures were taken after the patient was admitted to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) in the early hours of Tuesday.

If confirmed it would have been the first Ebola case in the UK for a decade.

The outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda in May has been declared a public health emergency of international concern by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The suspected patient had just arrived back in Glasgow from an affected Ebola country and went to hospital after developing symptoms.

Public Health Scotland (PHS) said it was aware that an individual in Scotland was tested for Ebola as a ‘precautionary measure’.

FILE - This undated colorized transmission electron micrograph file image made available by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows an Ebola virus virion. (Frederick Murphy/CDC via AP, File) qhxidiqxkiqtxinv

A spokesperson added: ‘The test result has now been received and is negative.’

Previously, a source told The National: ‘Obviously Ebola is a deadly and contagious illness, and emergency measures had to be put in place immediately to protect both staff and any members of the public.

‘The person came to the Acute Receiving Unit, where people are sent by their GP or the health board’s 101 number to avoid having to present at accident and emergency. This was quickly shut down and sealed off from the rest of the hospital.

‘The person was assessed there and then taken elsewhere in the hospital. I believe they were put into confinement while the tests to establish if they have Ebola or something else are carried out.’

Another hospital worker told the Glasgow Times: ‘The mere mention of the word Ebola strikes panic into people. You think of it as a disease that happens elsewhere.

Red Cross workers wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) walk in a formation as they disinfect the house of an unidentified man who died of Ebola, before retrieving his body. (Picture: Reuters)

‘The hospital has strict protocols and procedures to deal with these types of rare occurrences and everything seemed to be followed to a tee, but it is still a worry for those who were on duty at the time.’

A spokesperson for Public Health Scotland (PHS) said: ‘Public Health Scotland is working closely with UKHSA to assess routes by which travellers may enter the UK from affected countries.

‘The risk from people arriving in the UK from affected areas is low and the NHS has safe procedures in place for detecting and managing any such cases.

‘PHS and NHS boards across Scotland have well established protocols for assessing and testing travellers arriving in the UK from areas affected by Ebola where necessary.

‘Where required, contact tracing will occur and contacts may undergo clinical assessment and precautionary testing.

‘The UKHSA Returning Workers Scheme (RWS) which aims to protect and monitor the health of those who may travel from the UK to affected areas for their work, has been activated.

‘Organisations deploying workers to affected areas where they may be exposed to Ebola through their work, should register those workers with the scheme.’

Back in 2014, a Scottish nurse became the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the UK after treating patients in the ‘Red Zone’ in Sierra Leone’s disease-stricken Kerry Town.

Pauline Cafferkey was anassociate public health nurse based at Blantyre Health Centre, South Lanarkshire.

Colleagues believe that she may have contracted the illness after attending a church service without her hazard suit on Christmas morning.

BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE: Undated handout photo of Pauline Cafferkey a nurse from Blantyre in South Lanarkshire who is reported to be the woman diagnosed with Ebola  being treated at the Royal Free Hospital in north London. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Thursday January 19, 2012. See PA story HEALTH Ebola. Photo credit should read: Handout/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

Last week, a French doctor working in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) tested positive for Ebola after returning home.

France’s health ministry said the patient had been on a humanitarian mission and is currently isolating.

Those who may have come into contact with the patient are being traced, and the general risk the outbreak presents in Europe remains low.

Last week, it was revealed that the ‘first line of defence’ against the deadly strain of Ebola has collapsed.

Why is this Ebola outbreak so concerning?

FILE PHOTO: Red Cross workers handle the coffin of a man who died of Ebola virus before his burial, as aid agencies intensify efforts to contain the Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus, at the Nyamurongo cemetery in Bunia town, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, June 10, 2026. REUTERS/Gradel Muyisa Mumbere/File Photo

The strain of Ebolavirus behind this outbreak, known as Bundibugyo, is rare and currently has no vaccine or treatment.

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed this is the largest Bundibugyo outbreak on record.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared a public health emergency last month following the outbreak.

Contact tracing – identifying the people an infected person has come into contact with – has just 43% coverage in DRC.

Oxfam fieldwork found that there are just 0.2 doctors per 1,000 people, and some 70 health facilities have been destroyed by conflict.

The years-long violence in DRC has displaced millions, including people in Ituri, complicating contact tracing efforts.

Editorial Team

Sophia Martinez

World Affairs Correspondent

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