Key Points

The World Health Organization is tracking a serious Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Kasai province. Health officials have reported 48 cases, with 31 fatalities and 15 patients currently under treatment. A vaccination campaign is underway, with over 500 health workers and contacts already inoculated. Despite challenges in the remote Bulape health zone, WHO remains optimistic about controlling the spread of the virus.

Key Points: WHO Tracks Congo Ebola Outbreak with 31 Deaths Confirmed

  • 31 people dead in latest Ebola outbreak in DRC
  • 48 total cases reported in Kasai province
  • Vaccination campaign launched with 760 doses delivered
  • Transmission slowing due to intervention efforts
2 min read

At least 31 dead in latest Ebola outbreak in Congo: WHO

WHO reports 48 Ebola cases in Kasai province, vaccination efforts underway to control 16th outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo

"We are quite certain that if we continue on this trajectory, along with the rollout of vaccination, we should be able to control this outbreak - Patrick Otim, WHO Regional Office for Africa"

Kinshasa, Sep 18

At least 31 people have died in the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a World Health Organisation (WHO) official said Thursday.

Patrick Otim, an official from the WHO Regional Office for Africa, told an online press briefing that 48 cases have been reported in the central province of Kasai, including 38 confirmed. 31 patients have died, while 15 remain under treatment at an Ebola centre in the Bulape health zone, the epicentre of the outbreak, and two have been discharged, Xinhua News Agency reported.

According to Otim, a vaccination campaign has begun, with about 760 doses already delivered to Bulape. More than 500 health workers and close contacts of confirmed cases have been inoculated, and 45,000 additional doses are expected in the national capital, Kinshasa, in the coming days. He noted, however, that Bulape's remote location poses logistical challenges, particularly for cold-chain transport.

The official said transmission has slowed following interventions but urged continued vigilance, stressing the need for faster testing, tracing, and vaccination.

"We are seeing that there is a slowing down of transmission ... It is very good progress that we can build upon. We are quite certain that if we continue on this trajectory, along with the rollout of vaccination, we should be able to control this outbreak as soon as possible," said Otim.

The DRC government declared the outbreak on September 4 in Kasai, marking the country's 16th outbreak since Ebola was first identified in 1976. The previous outbreak ended in September 2022 after a single case was confirmed in North Kivu Province. Genetic testing later linked it to the 2018-2020 epidemic in North Kivu and Ituri that killed nearly 2,300 people.

Ebola is a highly contagious hemorrhagic fever that causes a range of symptoms such as fever, vomiting, diarrhea, generalized pain, and malaise, and in many cases, internal and external bleeding, according to the WHO.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
India should offer help - we have experience with mass vaccination campaigns and could assist with logistics. Our pharmaceutical companies could also supply medicines at affordable rates.
D
David E
The cold-chain transport issue is critical. This is where technology partnerships between countries could make a huge difference. Hope they get the additional 45,000 doses delivered safely.
A
Ananya R
So tragic. 16th outbreak since 1976 shows this is an ongoing crisis that needs sustained global attention, not just emergency response when numbers spike.
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Siddharth J
While the slowing transmission is good news, we must remember these are real people with families. Each number represents someone's loved one. Proper healthcare infrastructure investment is needed.
M
Michael C
The WHO and local health workers are doing heroic work in such difficult conditions. Respect to all frontline workers battling this outbreak. 💪

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