Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF): category 3 contact information
Advice for people who have come into contact with someone who has CCHF virus.
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You have been given this information sheet because you have had contact with someone who has Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF), or material contaminated with the virus that causes CCHF. You should follow the advice in this information sheet and check yourself for symptoms for 14 days after you had possible contact with CCHF. If you develop symptoms of CCHF within 14 days of your last exposure to CCHF, you should stay at home and call your designated contact immediately.
About CCHF
CCHF is a rare but serious disease caused by CCHF virus. CCHF is found across much of Africa, Central and Eastern Asia and Southern Europe. It is not normally found in the UK but has occasionally been found in patients who have caught it abroad and come to the UK.
How CCHF spreads
CCHF can spread by:
- direct contact with the organs, blood, secretions, or other bodily fluids of an infected person (including sexual transmission)
- contact with objects, such as needles or soiled clothing, that have been contaminated with infected secretions
- bites from infected ticks, or direct handling of infected ticks or livestock in affected countries
CCHF is not spread through routine, social contact (such as shaking hands or sitting next to someone) with people who do not have symptoms. There is no evidence that CCHF can spread through the air.
It can take up to 14 days from when someone is exposed to the virus for symptoms to appear.
Symptoms of CCHF
It is possible for someone who has caught the CCHF virus to have no symptoms of infection, or only mild symptoms. However, CCHF can also cause severe symptoms and death.
Early symptoms of CCHF are often mild and non-specific and include fever, muscle aches, dizziness, backache or headache. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain may also occur.
In more severe cases, symptoms may progress to bruising and/or bleeding. Multi-organ failure may develop in the most severe cases. Approximately 30% of clinically ill cases are fatal.
Preventing and treating CCHF
There is currently no licensed vaccine for CCHF. To avoid CCHF spreading between people, those caring for individuals with possible or suspected CCHF should avoid contact with the patient’s bodily fluids and should wear personal protective equipment (PPE).
Treatment for CCHF is with supportive care, including balancing fluids and electrolytes, maintaining a person’s oxygen status and blood pressure, and treating any co-infections. There are antiviral drugs which, if used early on after the start of symptoms may make the illness less serious for anyone infected. They do not prevent the illness altogether
Your risk of developing CCHF
You reported that you were in the same room as, and within 2 metres of, someone who had CCHF, but you did not have direct contact with them, their body fluids or objects that they may have contaminated.
We would like to monitor you for a period of 14 days from when you were last exposed to CCHF. This will mean that we can act quickly in the unlikely event that you develop symptoms, reducing the risks to you and to others close to you.
What you need to do
Your family and household contacts are not at risk of catching CCHF from you if you do not have any symptoms.
You should take the following actions for 14 days from when you were last exposed to CCHF:
- record your temperature and monitor yourself for other symptoms of CCHF (as listed above) twice per day at the same times each day
- report to your designated contact if you develop a temperature of 37.5°C or higher, or other symptoms of CCHF, so that they can arrange for you to be assessed. They will explain the local arrangements for accessing healthcare
- there are no restrictions on work, travel or social activities as long as you have no symptoms
- do not share towels, bed linen, toothbrushes or razors
- use barrier contraception or avoid unprotected sexual contact with other people
- postpone any non-essential medical or dental treatment including vaccination. If you need essential medical or dental treatment, inform your healthcare provider about your possible contact with CCHF
If you are a healthcare worker, you should tell your line manager that you have been identified as a contact of CCHF, but that you are still able to attend work as long as you remain asymptomatic.
Use of medicines such as aspirin, paracetamol or ibuprofen
Certain medicines, such as paracetamol, ibuprofen and aspirin, can reduce your body temperature during a fever (antipyretic) for up to 8 hours. Thermometer measurements may therefore show a lower temperature than would be expected for up to 8 hours after taking an antipyretic.
You must call your designated contact for further advice if you need to take an antipyretic medicine.
Please take your temperature before you take paracetamol, ibuprofen or aspirin. If your temperature is 37.5°C or higher, you must call your contact immediately.
A temperature of 37.5°C or higher is always significant, whether you are taking one of these medicines or not, and must be reported urgently.
What to do if you become ill
It is unlikely that you have caught CCHF. However, if you are feeling unwell or develop any of the symptoms of CCHF (including a temperature of 37.5°C or higher) within 14 days from when you had contact with CCHF, please stay at home. Take your temperature if you have not done this already. Phone your designated contact immediately, who will arrange for you to be assessed by an appropriate clinician. In an emergency, you should call 999 and tell them about your symptoms and possible contact with CCHF.
Further information
More information about CCHF can be found on the following website:
UK Health Security Agency: Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever: origins, reservoirs, transmission and guidelines - GOV.UK