Washington DC — An urgent international effort is underway to contain a rapidly spreading Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Uganda that has already infected hundreds and is suspected of causing dozens of deaths. In response to the growing crisis, the United States has triggered a public health law to limit entry from the virus-hit region following confirmation that an American citizen contracted the disease.
On Monday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed that an American working in the DRC tested positive for Ebola. According to the international charity Serge, the patient is a Christian missionary physician.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has officially declared the epidemic a “public health emergency of international concern,” classifying the outbreak as “extraordinary.” Health experts have expressed grave concerns as the outbreak is being driven by the Bundibugyo strain of the virus, which currently has no approved, specific vaccines or treatments and carries an estimated fatality rate of 25% to 40%.
In a decisive move to curb the spread of the virus across its borders, U.S. health officials began enforcing sweeping protective mechanisms on Monday. The new protocols include enhanced public health screenings for arrivals from affected regions and stringent restrictions limiting the entry of non-U.S. passport holders who have traveled to Uganda, the DRC, or South Sudan within the past three weeks.
Furthermore, the U.S. State Department has issued stern travel advisories warning against travel to the DRC and Uganda, while the U.S. embassy in Kampala, Uganda, has temporarily paused all visa services. The CDC is also working alongside interagency partners to relocate a small number of Americans directly affected by the outbreak and is deploying on-the-ground resources to assist local authorities with surveillance, contact tracing, and laboratory testing.
The outbreak’s epicenter is concentrated in the DRC’s remote northeastern Ituri province, but the virus has already crossed borders, with two laboratory-confirmed cases—including one death—reported in Kampala, the capital of neighboring Uganda. Health experts warn that the lack of connection between the two Kampala cases suggests the outbreak may be larger than current data reflects.
Compounding the crisis is a severe, preexisting humanitarian emergency in the eastern DRC, where violent conflict has displaced millions and severely weakened the local healthcare infrastructure.
“There are already deaths in the community. When people die at home, it means there are many more undetected cases,” Dr. Manenji Mangudu, the Oxfam DRC country director, warned on Monday. “By the time patients reach us, it is often too late to save them.”
International coordination is rapidly scaling up to support frontline workers. The DRC has opened three new treatment centers in the affected region to increase capacity, while the WHO recently facilitated the delivery of seven metric tons of emergency medical supplies, including protective equipment and hospital beds, to Bunia. Nongovernmental organizations like Doctors Without Borders (MSF) are also preparing large-scale responses to confront what is now the 17th recorded Ebola outbreak in the DRC’s history.
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