Another person in Mali has died from Ebola.

The health ministry announced Wednesday that a nurse died in the Malian capital of Bamako, becoming the second victim to fall fatally ill from the disease in the country, reports BBC.

According to officials, the nurse contracted the deadly virus while treating a man who arrived from Guinea at the Pasteur Clinic in Bamak. The clinic has been quarantined, and government officials urged citizens to come forward about any other suspected cases.

A 2-year-old girl was the first person to die in the West African nation in late October after traveling to Mali with her grandmother from Guinea, one of three countries where the outbreak is most severe.

Not long after the baby was diagnosed with Ebola, dozens of people, including medical workers, who came into contact with her were quarantined, reports CNN.

Meanwhile, back in the States, Dr. Craig Spencer was released from a New York City hospital on Tuesday after undergoing weeks of rigorous treatment and testing for Ebola.

The 33-year-old Harlem doctor tested positive for Ebola after he was admitted to the Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City on Oct. 23. He contacted authorities when he began showing symptoms of Ebola days after returning from Guinea, where he worked with Doctors Without Borders and treated Ebola patients.

On Monday, the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation issued a statement, saying, "Dr. Spencer poses no public-health risk" and he is set to be released on Tuesday, reports the New York Post.

Dr. Spencer initially told officials that he isolated himself in his apartment after he returned from West Africa on Oct. 17. However, it was later revealed that he went for a jog, traveled on several subways lines, went bowling in Brooklyn and ate at a restaurant in the West Village.

Doctors have not developed a cure or vaccine for Ebola.