CCHF occurs most frequently among agricultural workers, following the bite of an infected tick, and to a lesser extent among slaughterhouse workers exposed to the blood and tissues of infected livestock, and medical personnel through contact with the body fluids of infected persons. Serological or virological evidence of CCHF was widespread in Asia, including the Middle East (except Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan), Eastern Europe, central Africa, Western Africa, South Africa, and Madagascar. In 2017, the first case of Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever since 1967 was reported in the
Republic of Crimea, administered by Russia but internationally recognized as part of Ukraine. It is speculated that the importation of livestock with infected ticks from endemic regions of southern Russia since 2015 has contributed to the introduction of a subvariant of CCHF to Crimea, where previously only an endemic subvariant had been found.
Outbreaks From 1995 to 2013, 228 cases of CCHF were reported in the Republic of Kosovo, with a case-fatality rate of 25.5%. Between 2002–2008, the Ministry of Health of Turkey reported 2,508 CCHF cases and 133 deaths. During 2005, authorities reported 41 cases of CCHF in central Turkey's
Yozgat Province, with one death. In 2003, 38 people were infected with CCHF in
Mauritania, including 35 residents of Nouakchott. In September 2010, an outbreak was reported in Pakistan's
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Poor diagnosis and record keeping caused the extent of the outbreak to be uncertain, though some reports indicated over 100 cases, with a case-fatality rate above 10%. In January 2011, the first human cases of CCHF in India were reported in
Sanand, Gujarat, India, with 4 reported deaths, which included the
index patient, treating physician, and nurse. , 71 people were reported to have contracted the disease in Iran, resulting in 8 fatalities. In October 2012, a British man died from the disease at the
Royal Free Hospital in London. He had earlier been admitted to
Gartnavel General Hospital in
Glasgow, after returning on a flight from
Kabul in
Afghanistan. In July 2013, seven people died of CCHF in the Karyana village of
Babra, Gujarat, India. In August 2013, a farmer from
Agago, Uganda, was treated at
Kalongo Hospital for a confirmed CCHF infection. The deaths of three other individuals in the
northern region were suspected to have been caused by the virus. Another unrelated CCHF patient was admitted to
Mulago Hospital on the same day. The
Ministry of Health announced on the 19th that the outbreak was under control, but the second patient, a 27-year-old woman from
Nansana, died on the 21st. She is believed to have contracted the virus from her husband, who returned to Kampala after being treated for CCHF in
Juba, South Sudan. In June 2014, cases were diagnosed in Kazakhstan. Ten people, including an ambulance crew, were admitted to a hospital in southern Kazakhstan with suspected CCHF. In July 2014, an 8th person was found to be infected with CCHF at Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC), Pakistan. The eight patients, including a nurse and 6 Afghan nationals, died between April and July 2014. , sporadic confirmed cases have been reported from
Bhuj,
Amreli,
Sanand,
Idar and
Vadnagar in Gujarat, India. In November 2014, a doctor and a labourer in north Gujarat tested positive for the disease. In the following weeks, three more people died from CCHF. In March 2015, one more person died of CCHF in Gujarat. As of 2015, among livestock, CCHF was recognized as "widespread" in India, only 4 years after the first human case had been diagnosed. In August 2016, the first local case of CCHF in Western Europe occurred in Western Spain. A 62-year-old man, who had been bitten by a tick in Spain, died on August 25, infecting a nurse. The tick bite occurred in the
province of Ávila, 300 km away from the
province of Cáceres, where CCHF viral RNA from ticks was amplified in 2010. it was unclear what specific ecology led to the Spanish cases. In August 2016, several Pakistani news sources raised concerns regarding the disease. Between January and October 2016, CCHF outbreaks in Pakistan were reported with highest numbers of cases and deaths during August 2016, just before the festival of
Eid-al-Adha (held on September 13–15 in 2016). It was hypothesized that the festival could play an important part, as people could come into contact with domestic or imported animals potentially infected with the CCHF virus. The Pakistani NIH showed there was no correlation, and that CCHF cases have coincided with the peak tick proliferation during the preceding 8–10 years. In 2017, the General Directorate of Public Health in Turkey published official records of infections and casualties involving CCHF between 2008 and 2017. Cases declined from 1,318 in 2009 to 343 in 2017 alongside a lowered mortality rate. Cases are concentrated in rural areas of the southern
Black Sea region,
Central Anatolia region, and
Eastern Anatolia region during early summer months. On February 2, 2020, an outbreak was reported in
Mali involving fourteen cases and seven deaths, days before the
COVID-19 pandemic in Africa. In May 2020, a single case was reported in Mauritania. In July 2023, there was a single confirmed fatality of tick-borne CCHF in
North Macedonia. In July 2024, a lethal tick-borne CCHF case was confirmed in
Spain. In August 2024, the first-ever recorded laboratory-confirmed tick-borne CCHF case was confirmed in
Portugal. The 80-year-old male patient did not survive. In 2025, a 72-year-old man who was a livestock farmer in
Greece died of tick-borne CCHF. ==History==